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Indirect validation of tropospheric nitrogen dioxide retrieved from the OMI satellite instrument: Insight into the seasonal variation of nitrogen oxides at northern midlatitudes
Author(s) -
Lamsal L. N.,
Martin R. V.,
van Donkelaar A.,
Celarier E. A.,
Bucsela E. J.,
Boersma K. F.,
Dirksen R.,
Luo C.,
Wang Y.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/2009jd013351
Subject(s) - troposphere , ozone monitoring instrument , seasonality , environmental science , atmospheric sciences , tropospheric ozone , climatology , middle latitudes , microwave limb sounder , latitude , satellite , aerosol , atmospheric chemistry , ozone , meteorology , geography , geology , physics , statistics , mathematics , astronomy , geodesy
We examine the seasonal variation in lower tropospheric nitrogen oxides (NO x = NO + NO 2 ) at northern midlatitudes by evaluating tropospheric NO 2 columns observed from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) satellite instrument with surface NO 2 measurements (SouthEastern Aerosol Research and Characterization and Air Quality System) and current bottom‐up NO x emission inventories, using a global model of tropospheric chemistry (GEOS‐Chem). The standard (SP) and DOMINO (DP) tropospheric NO 2 column products from OMI exhibit broadly similar spatial and seasonal variation, but differ substantially over continental source regions. A comparison of the two OMI tropospheric NO 2 products with in situ surface NO 2 concentrations and bottom‐up NO x emissions over the southeast United States indicates that annual mean NO 2 columns from the DP are biased high by 21%–33% and those from the SP are biased high by 27%–43%. The bias in SP columns is highly seasonal, 67%–74% in summer compared with −6% to −1% in winter. Similar seasonal differences exist between top‐down and bottom‐up NO x emission inventories over North America, Europe, and East Asia. The air mass factor largely explains the observed seasonal difference between the DP and SP, and in turn the seasonal SP bias. We develop a third product (DP_GC) using averaging kernel information from the DP and NO 2 vertical profiles from GEOS‐Chem. This product reduces to 5%–21% the annual mean bias over the southeast United States. We use the seasonal variation in the DP_GC to estimate the seasonal variation in the lifetime of lower tropospheric NO x against oxidation to HNO 3 over the eastern United States. The effective NO x lifetime at OMI overpass time (early afternoon) ranges from 7.6 h in summer to 17.8 h in winter, consistent within 3 h of the simulated lifetime. GEOS‐Chem calculations reveal that the seasonal variation in OMI NO 2 columns largely reflects gas‐phase oxidation of NO 2 in summer with an increasing role for heterogenous chemistry in winter.

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