Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Spaceborne detection of XCO2 enhancement induced by Australian mega-bushfires
The 2019–20 Australian mega-bushfires, which raged particularly over New South Wales and Victoria, released large amounts of toxic haze and CO _2 . Here, we investigate whether the resulting CO _2 enhancement can be directly detected by satellite observations, based on National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) column-averaged CO _2 (XCO _2 ) product. We find that smoke from wildfires can greatly obscure satellite observations, making the available XCO _2 mainly locate over outer fringes of plumes downwind of the major mega-bushfires in eastern Australia in three orbit observations during November–December 2019, with their enhancements of approximately 1.5 ppm. This fire-induced CO _2 enhancement is further confirmed using an atmospheric transport model, Goddard Earth Observing System-Chem, forced by satellite observation-derived fire product Global Fire Emissions Database, version 4.1 and wind observations, with comparable simulated XCO _2 enhancements. Model simulation also suggests that the sensitivity of the downwind maximum XCO _2 enhancement is 0.41 $ \pm \,$ 0.04 ppm for 1 TgC d ^−1 fire emissions. In sum, though detectable to some extent, it remains a challenge to get the accurate maximum XCO _2 enhancements due to the gaps in XCO _2 detections obscured by smoke. Understanding the capability of OCO-2 XCO _2 detection is prerequisite for monitoring and constraining wildfire CO _2 emissions by inversions.
Spaceborne detection of XCO2 enhancement induced by Australian mega-bushfires
The 2019–20 Australian mega-bushfires, which raged particularly over New South Wales and Victoria, released large amounts of toxic haze and CO _2 . Here, we investigate whether the resulting CO _2 enhancement can be directly detected by satellite observations, based on National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) column-averaged CO _2 (XCO _2 ) product. We find that smoke from wildfires can greatly obscure satellite observations, making the available XCO _2 mainly locate over outer fringes of plumes downwind of the major mega-bushfires in eastern Australia in three orbit observations during November–December 2019, with their enhancements of approximately 1.5 ppm. This fire-induced CO _2 enhancement is further confirmed using an atmospheric transport model, Goddard Earth Observing System-Chem, forced by satellite observation-derived fire product Global Fire Emissions Database, version 4.1 and wind observations, with comparable simulated XCO _2 enhancements. Model simulation also suggests that the sensitivity of the downwind maximum XCO _2 enhancement is 0.41 $ \pm \,$ 0.04 ppm for 1 TgC d ^−1 fire emissions. In sum, though detectable to some extent, it remains a challenge to get the accurate maximum XCO _2 enhancements due to the gaps in XCO _2 detections obscured by smoke. Understanding the capability of OCO-2 XCO _2 detection is prerequisite for monitoring and constraining wildfire CO _2 emissions by inversions.
Spaceborne detection of XCO2 enhancement induced by Australian mega-bushfires
Jun Wang (Autor:in) / Zhiqiang Liu (Autor:in) / Ning Zeng (Autor:in) / Fei Jiang (Autor:in) / Hengmao Wang (Autor:in) / Weimin Ju (Autor:in)
2020
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Unbekannt
Metadata by DOAJ is licensed under CC BY-SA 1.0
Apocalypse now: Australian bushfires and the future of urban settlements
BASE | 2021
|Can commercial buildings cope with Australian bushfires? An IAQ analysis
DOAJ | 2021
|Apocalypse now: Australian bushfires and the future of urban settlements
Springer Verlag | 2021
|The effects of the Australian bushfires on physical activity in children
DOAJ | 2021
|The effects of the Australian bushfires on physical activity in children
Elsevier | 2020
|