4.7 Article

Factors that influence surface PM2.5 values inferred from satellite observations: perspective gained for the US Baltimore-Washington metropolitan area during DISCOVER-AQ

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages 2139-2153

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-14-2139-2014

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NASA through the Earth System Science Pathfinder Program Office
  2. ESSP Program Office
  3. NASA Postdoctoral Program fellowship

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During the NASA DISCOVER-AQ campaign over the US Baltimore, MD-Washington, D. C., metropolitan area in July 2011, the NASA P-3B aircraft performed extensive profiling of aerosol optical, chemical, and microphysical properties. These in situ profiles were coincident with ground-based remote sensing (AERONET) and in situ (PM2.5) measurements. Here, we use this data set to study the correlation between the PM2.5 observations at the surface and the column integrated measurements. Aerosol optical depth (AOD(550) (nm)) calculated with the extinction (550 nm) measured during the in situ profiles was found to be strongly correlated with the volume of aerosols present in the boundary layer (BL). Despite the strong correlation, some variability remains, and we find that the presence of aerosol layers above the BL (in the buffer layer - BuL) introduces significant uncertainties in PM2.5 estimates based on column-integrated measurements (overestimation of PM2.5 by a factor of 5). This suggests that the use of active remote sensing techniques would dramatically improve air quality retrievals. Indeed, the relationship between the AOD(550 nm) and the PM2.5 is strongly improved by accounting for the aerosol present in and above the BL (i.e., integrating the aerosol loading from the surface to the top of the BuL). Since more than 15% of the AOD values observed during DISCOVER-AQ are dominated by aerosol water uptake, the f(RH)(amb) (ratio of scattering coefficient at ambient relative humidity (RH) to scattering coefficient at low RH; see Sect. 3.2) is used to study the impact of the aerosol hygroscopicity on the PM2.5 retrievals. The results indicate that PM2.5 can be predicted within a factor up to 2 even when the vertical variability of the f(RH)(amb) is assumed to be negligible. Moreover, f(RH = 80 %) and RH measurements performed at the ground may be used to estimate the f(RH)(amb) during dry conditions (RHBL < 55 %).

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