4.6 Article

Ozone and Nitrogen Dioxide Pollution in a Coastal Urban Environment: The Role of Sea Breezes, and Implications of Their Representation for Remote Sensing of Local Air Quality

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES
Volume 126, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021JD035314

Keywords

sea breeze; ozone; air quality; nitrogen dioxide; remote sensing; tropomi

Funding

  1. NASA New Investigator Program [17-NIP17-0030]

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Sea breeze conditions significantly impact air pollutant concentrations in the Boston region, especially during summer. Mornings preceding sea breezes are characterized by low pollution background and accumulation of local emissions. Sea breeze days exhibit large horizontal gradients, which are more pronounced compared to prevailing westerly or easterly days.
We present an analysis of sea breeze conditions for the Boston region and examine their impact on the concentration of local air pollutants over the past decade. Sea breezes occur about one-third of the days during the summer and play an important role in the spatial distribution and temporal evolution of NO2 and O-3 across the urban area. Mornings preceding a sea breeze are characterized by low horizontal wind speeds, low background O-3, and an accumulation of local primary emissions. Air pollution is recirculated inland during sea breezes, frequently coinciding with the highest O-3 measured at the urban center. We use Ox (= NO2 + O-3) to account for temporary O-3 suppression by NO and find large horizontal gradients (differences in Ox greater than 30 ppb across less than 15 km), which are not observed on otherwise westerly or easterly prevailing days. This implies a challenge in surface monitoring networks to adequately represent the spatial variability of secondary air pollution in coastal urban areas. We investigate satellite-based climatologies of tropospheric NO2, and find evidence of selection biases due to cloud conditions, but show that sea breeze days are well observed due to the fair weather conditions generally associated with these events. The fine scale of the sea breeze in Boston is not reliably represented by meteorological reanalyses products commonly used in chemical transport models required to provide inputs for the satellite-based retrievals. This implies a higher systematic error in the operational retrievals on sea breeze days compared to other days.

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