Brightsurf Science News and Current Science News Events

 
Email a Friend Send to a friend
Printer Friendly Print ASU researchers use NASA satellites to improve pollution modeling

ASU researchers use NASA satellites to improve pollution modeling

December 18, 2007

TEMPE, Ariz. -- Detecting pollution, like catching criminals, requires evidence and witnesses; but on the scale of countries, continents and oceans, having enough detectors is easier said than done.

A team of air quality modelers, climatologists and air policy specialists at Arizona State University may soon change that. Under a grant from the Environmental Protection Agency, they have developed a new way to close the gaps in the global pollution dragnet by using NASA satellite data to detect precursors to ozone pollution, also known as smog.




The technique, devised with the aid of health specialists from University of California at Berkeley, uses satellite data to improve ASU's existing computer models of ozone events - filling in the blanks while expanding coverage to much larger areas.

"The satellite data provides information about remote locations," said Rick Van Schoik, director of ASU's North American Center for Transborder Studies. "It gives us data from oceans and about events from other countries with less advanced monitoring capabilities, such as Mexico."

Such information can have vital implications for health, especially in southern Arizona. According to Joe Fernando, a professor in ASU's department of mechanical and aerospace engineering and the environmental fluid dynamics program, who worked on the project, ozone is a key ingredient in urban smog, which affects even healthy adults and presents a special health risk to small children, the elderly and those with lung ailments. It can cause shortness of breath, chest pains, increased risk of infection, aggravation of asthma and significant decreases in lung function. Some studies have linked ozone exposure with death by stroke, premature death among people with severe asthma, cardiac birth defects and reduced lung-function growth in children.

This new satellite-assisted model could allow researchers to see an ozone plume forming and work with communities to head off health effects in advance.

"Before, if there were precursors of an ozone event, we couldn't see them - we just got hit by the pollution," Van Schoik said. "Now, we can watch the event build."

Improved oceanic coverage could also help with monitoring one of the largest sources of pollution along the coasts: oceanic ships, which are covered only by international treaties and are not regulated by the EPA.

Ozone forms when nitrogen oxides and volatile organic hydrocarbons - byproducts of fossil fuel pollution - react with one another in the presence of sunlight and warm temperatures, resulting in a chain reaction. This chain reaction can mean that large amounts of ozone can bloom from even moderate amounts of nitrogen oxides.

Scientists can detect ozone by detecting the absorption of specific wavelengths of light, but they have had to rely on ground data and radiosondes - atmospheric instrumentation bundles sent up on weather balloons - to surmount the large uncertainties associated with the technique.

"This is the reason comparisons were made between low-level ozone direct measurements with those obtained from satellites," said Fernando. "The importance is that the satellite data were used to improve model performance - that this work will lead to better model predictions and hence superior forecasting of ozone and improved health warnings."

The satellites currently provide data every 16 days. Each square, or pixel, of the grid they cover is five by eight kilometers, but Van Schoik said that the resolution would continue to improve.

"NASA has developed tools that are starting to fulfill much of the promise that we hoped for when NASA began engaging in global environmental monitoring," he said. "With each member of our team adding their own expertise, we are seeing just how powerful that can be."

Arizona State University



Related Pollution News Articles Pollution News and Current Pollution Events RSS Pollution News and Current Pollution Events RSS
Smithsonian coral biodiversity survey of Panama's Pearl Islands
A comprehensive survey of coral biodiversity in Panama's Las Perlas Archipelago, published in the journal Environmental Conservation by researchers from the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute and their colleagues, has resulted in clear conservation recommendations for a new coastal management plan.

Penguins setting off sirens over health of world's oceans
Like the proverbial canary in the coal mine, penguins are sounding the alarm for potentially catastrophic changes in the world's oceans, and the culprit isn't only climate change, says a University of Washington conservation biologist.

Human influences challenge penguin populations
The ecology of penguins makes these iconic swimming and diving seabirds of the Southern Hemisphere unusually susceptible to environmental changes.

Special topics in environmental mechanics
With rapid development of economics since the 1980s, people have been increasingly realized that the environment plays an important role in the sustainable development of society and economy.

Ancient Oak Trees Help Reduce Global Warming, MU Study Finds
The battle to reduce carbon emissions is at the heart of many eco-friendly efforts, and researchers from the University of Missouri have discovered that nature has been lending a hand. Researchers at the Missouri Tree Ring Laboratory in the Department of Forestry discovered that trees submerged in freshwater aquatic systems store carbon for thousands of years, a significantly longer period of time than trees that fall in a forest, thus keeping carbon out of the atmosphere.

Air monitoring helps anticipate possible ecosystem changes
When rain settles the atmosphere and brings air pollutants to the ground, it can have a lasting effect on ecosystems, sometimes hundreds of miles away, according to a Texas AgriLife Research agricultural engineer.

Feeding and fueling the future: the bioenergy potential of reviving abandoned agricultural land
Across the globe, hundreds of millions of acres of once-productive agricultural land lie abandoned, according to a new report from researchers at Stanford University and the Carnegie Institution for Science. If this land was used to grow crops for conversion into biofuel, it could help ease the energy crunch without worsening the world food shortage or contributing to global warming.

Genomics of large marine animals showcased in the Biological Bulletin
Though the slow moving purple sea urchin may look oblivious, lacking a head, eyes and ears, this prickly creature has an impressive suite of sensory receptors to detect outside signals.

Smoking out the mediators of airway damage caused by pollutants
New insight into how pollution and cigarette smoke damage airways has been provided by Pierangelo Geppetti and colleagues, at the University of Florence, Italy, who studied the effects of such chemicals on guinea pig airways.

UNH Researchers Test Sediment-Scrubbing Technology In Cocheco River
In a mud flat at the edge of the Cocheco River, just outside downtown Dover, scientists from the University of New Hampshire's Contaminated Sediments Center are testing an innovative way to treat polluted sediment in coastal waterways.
More Pollution News Articles
The World Without Us
by Alan Weisman


Silent Spring
by Rachel Carson


The Lorax (Classic Seuss)
by Dr. Seuss, Theodor Seuss Geisel


A Civil Action
by Jonathan Harr


Better Basics for the Home: Simple Solutions for Less Toxic Living
by Annie Berthold-Bond


Ice, Mud and Blood: Lessons from Climates Past (Macmillan Science)
by Chris Turney


The Skeptical Environmentalist: Measuring the Real State of the World
by Bjorn Lomborg


How to Grow Fresh Air: 50 House Plants that Purify Your Home or Office
by B. C. Wolverton


The Geography of Nowhere: The Rise and Decline of America's Man-Made Landscape
by James Howard Kunstler


Harmonious Environment: Beautify, Detoxify and Energize Your Life, Your Home and Your Planet
by Norma Lehmeier-Hartie


© 2008 BrightSurf.com