Air Quality Forecast Verification Using Satellite Data

Author:

Kondragunta S.1,Lee P.2,McQueen J.3,Kittaka C.45,Prados A. I.6,Ciren P.7,Laszlo I.1,Pierce R. B.1,Hoff R.6,Szykman J. J.8

Affiliation:

1. NOAA/NESDIS/Center for Satellite Applications and Research, Camp Springs, Maryland

2. Science Applications International Corporation, Camp Springs, Maryland

3. NOAA/NWS/National Centers for Environmental Prediction, Camp Springs, Maryland

4. Science Applications International Corporation, Hampton, Virginia

5. NASA Langley Research Center, Norfolk, Virginia

6. Joint Center for Earth Systems Technology, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland

7. *QSS, Inc., Camp Springs, Maryland

8. Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina

Abstract

Abstract NOAA’s operational geostationary satellite retrievals of aerosol optical depths (AODs) were used to verify National Weather Service developmental (research mode) particulate matter (PM2.5) predictions tested during the summer 2004 International Consortium for Atmospheric Research on Transport and Transformation/New England Air Quality Study (ICARTT/NEAQS) field campaign. The forecast period included long-range transport of smoke from fires burning in Canada and Alaska and a regional-scale sulfate event over the Gulf of Mexico and the eastern United States. Over the 30-day time period for which daytime hourly forecasts were compared with observations, the categorical (exceedance defined as AOD > 0.55) forecast accuracy was between 0% and 20%. Hourly normalized mean bias (forecasts − observations) ranged between −50% and +50% with forecasts being positively biased when observed AODs were small and negatively biased when observed AODs were high. Normalized mean errors are between 50% and 100% with the errors on the lower end during the 18–22 July 2004 time period when a regional-scale sulfate event occurred. Spatially, the errors are small over the regions where sulfate plumes were present. The correlation coefficient also showed similar features (spatially and temporally) with a peak value of ∼0.6 during the 18–22 July 2004 time period. The dominance of long-range transport of smoke into the United States during the summer of 2004, neglected in the model predictions, skewed the model forecast performance. Enhanced accuracy and reduced normalized mean errors during the time period when a sulfate event prevailed show that the forecast system has skill in predicting PM2.5 associated with urban/industrial pollution events.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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