Assessing the capability of different satellite observing configurations to resolve the distribution of methane emissions at kilometer scales
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Published:2018-06-13
Issue:11
Volume:18
Page:8265-8278
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Turner Alexander J.ORCID, Jacob Daniel J., Benmergui Joshua, Brandman Jeremy, White Laurent, Randles Cynthia A.
Abstract
Abstract. Anthropogenic methane emissions originate from a large number of fine-scale
and often transient point sources. Satellite observations of atmospheric
methane columns are an attractive approach for monitoring these emissions but
have limitations from instrument precision, pixel resolution, and measurement
frequency. Dense observations will soon be available in both low-Earth and
geostationary orbits, but the extent to which they can provide fine-scale
information on methane sources has yet to be explored. Here we present an
observation system simulation experiment (OSSE) to assess the capabilities of
different satellite observing system configurations. We conduct a 1-week
WRF-STILT simulation to generate methane column footprints at
1.3 × 1.3 km2 spatial resolution and hourly temporal resolution
over a 290 × 235 km2 domain in the Barnett Shale, a major
oil and gas field in Texas with a large number of point sources. We sub-sample
these footprints to match the observing characteristics of the recently
launched TROPOMI instrument (7 × 7 km2 pixels, 11 ppb
precision, daily frequency), the planned GeoCARB instrument
(2.7 × 3.0 km2 pixels, 4 ppb precision, nominal twice-daily
frequency), and other proposed observing configurations. The information
content of the various observing systems is evaluated using the Fisher
information matrix and its eigenvalues. We find that a week of TROPOMI
observations should provide information on temporally invariant emissions at
∼ 30 km spatial resolution. GeoCARB should provide information
available on temporally invariant emissions ∼ 2–7 km spatial
resolution depending on sampling frequency (hourly to daily). Improvements to
the instrument precision yield greater increases in information content than
improved sampling frequency. A precision better than 6 ppb is critical for
GeoCARB to achieve fine resolution of emissions. Transient emissions would be
missed with either TROPOMI or GeoCARB. An aspirational high-resolution
geostationary instrument with 1.3 × 1.3 km2 pixel resolution,
hourly return time, and 1 ppb precision would effectively constrain the
temporally invariant emissions in the Barnett Shale at the kilometer scale
and provide some information on hourly variability of sources.
Funder
ExxonMobil Research and Engineering Company
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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