Emission Monitoring Mobile Experiment (EMME): an overview and first results of the St. Petersburg megacity campaign 2019

Global climate change is one of the most important scientific, societal and economic contemporary challenges. Fundamental understanding of the major processes driving climate change is the key problem which is to be solved not only on a global but also on a regional scale. The accuracy of regional c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Atmospheric measurement techniques 2021-02, Vol.14 (2), p.1047-1073
Hauptverfasser: Makarova, Maria, Alberti, Carlos, Ionov, Dmitry, Hase, Frank, Foka, Stefani C., Blumenstock, Thomas, Warneke, Thorsten, Virolainen, Yana A., Kostsov, Vladimir S., Frey, Matthias, Poberovskii, Anatoly, Timofeyev, Yuri M., Paramonova, Nina N., Volkova, Kristina A., Zaitsev, Nikita A., Biryukov, Egor Y., Osipov, Sergey, Makarov, Boris K., Polyakov, Alexander, Ivakhov, Viktor M., Imhasin, Hamud Kh, Mikhailov, Eugene F.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Global climate change is one of the most important scientific, societal and economic contemporary challenges. Fundamental understanding of the major processes driving climate change is the key problem which is to be solved not only on a global but also on a regional scale. The accuracy of regional climate modelling depends on a number of factors. One of these factors is the adequate and comprehensive information on the anthropogenic impact which is highest in industrial regions and areas with dense population - modern megacities. Megacities are not only "heat islands", but also significant sources of emissions of various substances into the atmosphere, including greenhouse and reactive gases. In 2019, the mobile experiment EMME (Emission Monitoring Mobile Experiment) was conducted within the St. Petersburg agglomeration (Russia) aiming to estimate the emission intensity of greenhouse (CO2, CH4) and reactive (CO, NOx) gases for St. Petersburg, which is the largest northern megacity. St. Petersburg State University (Russia), Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (Germany) and the University of Bremen (Germany) jointly ran this experiment. The core instruments of the campaign were two portable Bruker EM27/SUN Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectrometers which were used for ground-based remote sensing measurements of the total column amount of CO2, CH4 and CO at upwind and downwind locations on opposite sides of the city. The NO2 tropospheric column amount was observed along a circular highway around the city by continuous mobile measurements of scattered solar visible radiation with an OceanOptics HR4000 spectrometer using the differential optical absorption spectroscopy (DOAS) technique. Simultaneously, air samples were collected in air bags for subsequent laboratory analysis. The air samples were taken at the locations of FTIR observations at the ground level and also at altitudes of about 100 m when air bags were lifted by a kite (in case of suitable landscape and favourable wind conditions). The entire campaign consisted of 11 mostly cloudless days of measurements in March-April 2019. Planning of measurements for each day included the determination of optimal location for FTIR spectrometers based on weather forecasts, combined with the numerical modelling of the pollution transport in the megacity area. The real-time corrections of the FTIR operation sites were performed depending on the actual evolution of the megacity NOx plume as detected by the mobile
ISSN:1867-1381
1867-8548
1867-8548
DOI:10.5194/amt-14-1047-2021