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Global Wet‐Reduced Nitrogen Deposition Derived From Combining Satellite Measurements With Output From a Chemistry Transport Model
Author(s) -
Liu Lei,
Yang Yuyu,
Xi Ruipeng,
Zhang Xiuying,
Xu Wen,
Liu Xuejun,
Li Yi,
Liu Pu,
Wang Zhen
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2020jd033977
Subject(s) - deposition (geology) , satellite , nitrogen , precipitation , environmental science , atmospheric sciences , chemical transport model , environmental chemistry , chemistry , meteorology , troposphere , geography , geology , physics , paleontology , organic chemistry , astronomy , sediment
Abstract Wet‐reduced nitrogen (NH 4 + ) is the main component of atmospheric nitrogen (N) deposition. Due to the poor coverage of ground‐based measurements, it is still challenging to characterize the global wet‐reduced NH 4 + deposition. Here we utilize NH 3 measurements from satellite retrievals (Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer) to estimate global wet NH 4 + deposition at 0.1° grids for nine years (2008–2016). We achieve this by developing a novel approach by calculating the feedback ratio between wet NH 4 + concentration in precipitation and atmospheric NH 3 columns using a global chemistry transport model (GEOS‐Chem). Satellite‐based wet NH 4 + concentration and deposition is relatively highly correlated with the ground‐based measurements ( r  = 0.88 and bias = 12% for wet deposition). The largest increase in the satellite‐derived wet NH 4 + deposition occurs in southern China (>0.5 kg N ha −1  yr −1 ), followed by northeastern India, North America, and Western Europe. The proposed method is simple, fast, and effective in estimating wet NH 4 + deposition using the satellite observations without depending on the ground‐based measurements for constructing the models. It is particularly helpful in estimating wet NH 4 + deposition over regions with few monitoring sites. Our unique satellite‐derived wet NH 4 + deposition can be applied for evaluating its impacts on ecosystems in the future.

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