4.1 Article

Bay breeze influence on surface ozone at Edgewood, MD during July 2011

Journal

JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 72, Issue 3-4, Pages 335-353

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10874-012-9241-6

Keywords

Ozone; Bay Breeze; Pollution; Edgewood; Mid-Atlantic; DISCOVER-AQ

Funding

  1. NASA DISCOVER-AQ grant [NNX10AR39G]
  2. NASA [NNX08AJ15G]
  3. NASA [NNX10AR39G, 124193, 99685, NNX08AJ15G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Surface ozone (O-3) was analyzed to investigate the role of the bay breeze on air quality at two locations in Edgewood, Maryland (lat: 39.4A degrees, lon: -76.3A degrees) for the month of July 2011. Measurements were taken as part of the first year of NASA's Deriving Information on Surface Conditions from Column and Vertically Resolved Observations Relevant to Air Quality (DISCOVER-AQ) Earth Venture campaign and as part of NASA's Geostationary for Coastal and Air Pollution Events Chesapeake Bay Oceanographic campaign with DISCOVER-AQ (Geo-CAPE CBODAQ). Geo-CAPE CBODAQ complements DISCOVER-AQ by providing ship-based observations over the Chesapeake Bay. A major goal of DISCOVER-AQ is determining the relative roles of sources, photochemistry and local meteorology during air quality events in the Mid-Atlantic region of the U.S. Surface characteristics, transport and vertical structures of O-3 during bay breezes were identified using in-situ surface, balloon and aircraft data, along with remote sensing equipment. Localized late day peaks in O-3 were observed during bay breeze days, maximizing an average of 3 h later compared to days without bay breezes. Of the 10 days of July 2011 that violated the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) 8 h O-3 standard of 75 parts per billion by volume (ppbv) at Edgewood, eight exhibited evidence of a bay breeze circulation. The results indicate that while bay breezes and the processes associated with them are not necessary to cause exceedances in this area, bay breezes exacerbate poor air quality that sustains into the late evening hours at Edgewood. The vertical and horizontal distributions of O-3 from the coastal Edgewood area to the bay also show large gradients that are often determined by boundary layer stability. Thus, developing air quality models that can sufficiently resolve these dynamics and associated chemistry, along with more consistent monitoring of O-3 and meteorology on and along the complex coastline of Chesapeake Bay must be a high priority.

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