AI Article Synopsis

  • This paper discusses a study on a satellite system designed to observe carbon monoxide (CO) in the atmosphere, specifically over North America, East Asia, and Europe.
  • The research assesses the impact of cloud cover on data collection efficiency and highlights that data density is lowest during the Asian summer due to high cloud cover.
  • It concludes that using multiple satellites significantly improves the accuracy of CO measurements, particularly near major pollution sources, and suggests that winter is the best time for these observations due to longer CO lifetimes, allowing for better global data assimilation.

Article Abstract

This paper describes the second phase of an Observing System Simulation Experiment (OSSE) that utilizes the synthetic measurements from a constellation of satellites measuring atmospheric composition from geostationary (GEO) Earth orbit presented in part I of the study. Our OSSE is focused on carbon monoxide observations over North America, East Asia and Europe where most of the anthropogenic sources are located. Here we assess the impact of a potential GEO constellation on constraining northern hemisphere (NH) carbon monoxide (CO) using data assimilation. We show how cloud cover affects the GEO constellation data density with the largest cloud cover (i.e., lowest data density) occurring during Asian summer. We compare the modeled state of the atmosphere (Control Run), before CO data assimilation, with the known "true" state of the atmosphere (Nature Run) and show that our setup provides realistic atmospheric CO fields and emission budgets. Overall, the Control Run underestimates CO concentrations in the northern hemisphere, especially in areas close to CO sources. Assimilation experiments show that constraining CO close to the main anthropogenic sources significantly reduces errors in NH CO compared to the Control Run. We assess the changes in error reduction when only single satellite instruments are available as compared to the full constellation. We find large differences in how measurements for each continental scale observation system affect the hemispherical improvement in long-range transport patterns, especially due to seasonal cloud cover. A GEO constellation will provide the most efficient constraint on NH CO during winter when CO lifetime is longer and increments from data assimilation associated with source regions are advected further around the globe.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6999668PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2016.06.001DOI Listing

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