Systematic analysis of tropospheric NO2 long-range transport events detected in GOME-2 satellite data

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Abstract

Intercontinental long-range transport (LRT) events of NO2 relocate the effects of air pollution from emission regions to remote, pristine regions. We detect transported plumes in tropospheric NO2 columns measured by the GOME-2/MetOp-A instrument with a specialized algorithm and trace the plumes to their sources using the HYSPLIT Lagrangian transport model. With this algorithm we find 3808 LRT events over the ocean for the period 2007 to 2011. LRT events occur frequently in the mid-latitudes, emerging usually from coastal high-emission regions. In the free troposphere, plumes of NO2 can travel for several days to the polar oceanic atmosphere or to other continents. They travel along characteristic routes and originate from both continuous anthropogenic emission and emission events such as bush fires. Most NO2 LRT events occur during autumn and winter months, when meteorological conditions and emissions are most favorable. The evaluation of meteorological data shows that the observed NO2 LRT is often linked to cyclones passing over an emission region. © Author(s) 2014. CC Attribution 3.0 License.

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Zien, A. W., Richter, A., Hilboll, A., Blechschmidt, A. M., & Burrows, J. P. (2014). Systematic analysis of tropospheric NO2 long-range transport events detected in GOME-2 satellite data. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 14(14), 7367–7396. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-14-7367-2014

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