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Published byGregory Ellis Modified over 9 years ago
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Siberian Biomass Burning Plumes Across the Pacific: Impact on Surface Air Quality in the Pacific Northwest Dan Jaffe, Peter Weiss-Penzias, J.B. Dennison, Isaac Bertschi and Doug Westphal Acknowledgements: Lyatt Jaeglé, UW Paul Novelli, NOAA-CMDL Roxanne Vingarzan, Environment Canada Hiroshi Tanimoto, NIES-Japan Funding: NSF and NOAA
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Trans-Pacific transport of pollutants is well documented in spring, with occasional occurrences of O 3 to ~90 ppbv. See for example: Jaffe D.,McKendry I., Anderson T., and Price H. Six 'new' episodes of trans- Pacific transport of air pollutants. Atmos. Envir. 37, 391-404, 2003. What about other seasons? Goals for Summer 2003 campaign: Quantify “background” atmospheric composition during summer; Identify whether LRT can occur during summer; Identify role of Siberian biomass burning on PNW; Better understand connection between background atmosphere and regional air quality.
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Summer 2003 had substantial Siberian fires, larger then 1987, 1998 or 2002 NAAPS Model Forecast for June 2, 2003 Vertical profile
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June 2 nd, vertical profile Red line shows summer median NAAPS model and Hysplit back trajectories confirm the Siberian source.
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GEOS-CHEM global model simulation June, July, August 2003 enhancement over climatological values 2003 emissions from the Siberian fires were much larger then climatological: 61 tg for CO 0.7 tgN for NOx CO enhancement: 15-35 ppbv O 3 enhancement: 2-6 ppbv Courtesy of Lyatt Jaeglé, UW CO O3O3
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Are there implications on air quality? On June 2 nd, 2003 long-range transport brought elevated CO and aerosols and O 3 (>100 ppbv) to the lower troposphere of the Pacific NW. On June 1-3, elevated O 3 (50-60 ppbv) was seen at a number of surface sites around Washington state; Over the next few days, a local high-pressure system moved into the region and on June 6 th, 2003, Enumclaw, Washington had an 8-hour O 3 mixing ratio of 96 ppbv, an exceedance of the US standard. Enumclaw is a rural community about 50 km south of Seattle; Was there a contribution from long-range transport to the high surface O 3 seen on June 6 th ? To answer this, we need a surrogate for local O 3 production. We have used local temperature as this surrogate to calculate a long-range transport contribution of 15-20 ppbv.
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Conclusions Trans-Pacific transport of pollutants from Eurasia to North America can occur in summer; 2003 had the largest area of Russian biomass burned in recent past. During the summer of 2003, we saw evidence of LRT to the Pacific NW on 3 out of 10 of our aircraft missions, including a large episode on June 2; On June 6 th, 2003 Enumclaw Washington had an 8- hour mean O 3 value of 96 ppbv. We calculate that long-range transport contributed 15-20 ppbv to this elevated value.
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