Evaluating the impact of spatial resolution on tropospheric NO<sub>2</sub> column comparisons within urban areas using high-resolution airborne data
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Published:2019-11-22
Issue:11
Volume:12
Page:6091-6111
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ISSN:1867-8548
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Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Judd Laura M., Al-Saadi Jassim A., Janz Scott J., Kowalewski Matthew G., Pierce R. Bradley, Szykman James J., Valin Lukas C., Swap RobertORCID, Cede Alexander, Mueller MoritzORCID, Tiefengraber Martin, Abuhassan Nader, Williams David
Abstract
Abstract. NASA deployed the GeoTASO airborne UV–visible
spectrometer in May–June 2017 to produce high-resolution (approximately 250 m×250 m) gapless NO2 datasets over the western shore of Lake Michigan and over the Los Angeles Basin. The results collected show that the airborne tropospheric vertical column retrievals compare well with
ground-based Pandora spectrometer column NO2 observations (r2=0.91 and slope of 1.03). Apparent disagreements between the two measurements can be sensitive to the coincidence criteria and are often
associated with large local variability, including rapid temporal changes
and spatial heterogeneity that may be observed differently by the sunward-viewing Pandora observations. The gapless mapping strategy executed during
the 2017 GeoTASO flights provides data suitable for averaging to coarser
areal resolutions to simulate satellite retrievals. As simulated satellite
pixel area increases to values typical of TEMPO (Tropospheric Emissions: Monitoring Pollution), TROPOMI (TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument), and OMI (Ozone Monitoring Instrument), the
agreement with Pandora measurements degraded, particularly for the most
polluted columns as localized large pollution enhancements observed by
Pandora and GeoTASO are spatially averaged with nearby less-polluted
locations within the larger area representative of the satellite spatial
resolutions (aircraft-to-Pandora slope: TEMPO scale =0.88; TROPOMI
scale =0.77; OMI scale =0.57). In these two regions, Pandora and TEMPO or TROPOMI have the potential to compare well at least up to pollution scales of 30×1015 molecules cm−2. Two publicly available OMI tropospheric NO2 retrievals are found to be biased low with respect to these Pandora observations. However, the agreement improves when higher-resolution a priori inputs are used for the tropospheric air mass factor calculation (NASA V3 standard product slope =0.18 and Berkeley High Resolution product slope =0.30). Overall, this work explores best practices for satellite validation strategies with Pandora direct-sun observations by showing the sensitivity to product spatial resolution and demonstrating how the high-spatial-resolution NO2 data retrieved from airborne spectrometers, such as GeoTASO, can be used with high-temporal-resolution ground-based column observations to evaluate the influence of spatial heterogeneity on validation results.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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