4.7 Article

Overview of the Lake Michigan Ozone Study 2017

期刊

BULLETIN OF THE AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
卷 102, 期 12, 页码 E2207-E2225

出版社

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-D-20-0061.1

关键词

Sea breezes; Coastal meteorology; Aircraft observations; Satellite observations; Air quality; Ozone

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [AGS-1712909, AGS-1713001, AGS-1712828]
  2. NSF [AGS-1428257, 1400815]
  3. EPA
  4. NOAA GOES-R program office
  5. Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI)
  6. NASA [NNX16AN36G]
  7. EPA's Office of Research and Developments A-E-Energy Research Program
  8. [AGS-1405014]
  9. NASA [899181, NNX16AN36G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Lake Michigan Ozone Study 2017 (LMOS 2017) was a collaborative multiagency field study focusing on ozone chemistry, meteorology, and air quality observations in the southern Lake Michigan area. The study aimed to improve air quality modeling of the region and observed local photochemical ozone production, NO2 emissions, and meteorological characteristics of lake breezes. Measurements of various air pollutants and composition were conducted, providing insights for state and federal air quality management.
The Lake Michigan Ozone Study 2017 (LMOS 2017) was a collaborative multiagency field study targeting ozone chemistry, meteorology, and air quality observations in the southern Lake Michigan area. The primary objective of LMOS 2017 was to provide measurements to improve air quality modeling of the complex meteorological and chemical environment in the region. LMOS 2017 science questions included spatiotemporal assessment of nitrogen oxides (NOx = NO + NO2) and volatile organic compounds (VOC) emission sources and their influence on ozone episodes; the role of lake breezes; contribution of new remote sensing tools such as GeoTASO, Pandora, and TEMPO to air quality management; and evaluation of photochemical grid models. The observing strategy included GeoTASO on board the NASA UC-12 aircraft capturing NO2 and formaldehyde columns, an in situ profiling aircraft, two ground-based coastal enhanced monitoring locations, continuous NO2 columns from coastal Pandora instruments, and an instrumented research vessel. Local photochemical ozone production was observed on 2 June, 9-12 June, and 14-16 June, providing insights on the processes relevant to state and federal air quality management. The LMOS 2017 aircraft mapped significant spatial and temporal variation of NO2 emissions as well as polluted layers with rapid ozone formation occurring in a shallow layer near the Lake Michigan surface. Meteorological characteristics of the lake breeze were observed in detail and measurements of ozone, NOx, nitric acid, hydrogen peroxide, VOC, oxygenated VOC (OVOC), and fine particulate matter (PM2.5) composition were conducted. This article summarizes the study design, directs readers to the campaign data repository, and presents a summary of findings.

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