Improving estimates of pollution outflow at Gosan using 222Rn
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Date
2015-11-01
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
World Meteorological Organization
Abstract
The best understanding of climatic, ecological
and health effects from increasing
Southeast Asian emissions will likely be achieved
by models coupled to detailed emission
inventories and remote sensing data. To improve
model accuracy and forecast horizons,
careful evaluation against appropriate observations
is essential. To minimize the
chance of misleading comparisons, it is important
to ensure ground-based reference observations
are well matched with the model
output, especially regarding fetch regions and
scales of observation. To quantify upstream
emissions based on ground-based observations
it is necessary to: (i) understand the measurement
“footprint”, (ii) identify observations
most representative of air that has been in
good contact with the surface over which it
has travelled, and has not been significantly
diluted by fronts or deep convection in transit,
(iii) ensure observations are representative
of the whole boundary layer (BL), (iv) minimize
the influence of local emissions, (v)
characterize changes in mixing depth, and
(vi) characterize evolving “background”
concentrations.
Description
Keywords
Pollution, Asia, Gases, Emission, Dilution
Citation
Chambers, S. D., Kang, C.-H., Williams, A. G., Crawford, J., Griffiths, A. D., & Kim, W. H. (2015). Improving estimates of pollution outflow at Gosan using 222Rn. Asia-Pacific GAW on Greenhouse Gases Newsletter. Vol 6, 26-29.