TY - JOUR
T1 - The CHRONOS mission
T2 - Capability for sub-hourly synoptic observations of carbon monoxide and methane to quantify emissions and transport of air pollution
AU - Edwards, David P.
AU - Worden, Helen M.
AU - Neil, Doreen
AU - Francis, Gene
AU - Valle, Tim
AU - Arellano, Avelino F.
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgements. This work was partly supported by NASA grant NNX15AK98G. The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) is sponsored by the National Science Foundation. The NCAR MOPITT project is supported by the NASA Earth Observing System program. We thank Glenn Diskin and the DACOM measurement team at NASA Langley for providing the DISCOVER-AQ CH4 measurements shown in Fig. 3.
Funding Information:
This work was partly supported by NASA grant NNX15AK98G. The National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) is sponsored by the National Science Foundation. The NCAR MOPITT project is supported by the NASA Earth Observing System program
Funding Information:
Nine months before the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was founded, air quality criteria were established for CO (U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Public Health Service, National Air Pollution Control Administration, 1970) to protect public health in compliance with the 1967 amendments (Public Law 90-148) to the Clean Air Act of 1963 (Public Law 88-206). CO is produced by combustion processes – including transportation, manufacturing, agricultural burning and wildfires – and by hydrocarbon oxidation. CO participates in the formation of ground level ozone; as the dominant sink for the main tropospheric oxidant, OH, CO plays a central role in determining the ability of the atmosphere to cleanse itself of pollutants (e.g., Holloway et al., 2000) and thus affects the lifetime of CH4 (Myhre et al., 2013). The CO lifetime of ∼ 2 months provides time for CO to be transported globally, yet is suffi-
Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) 2018.
PY - 2018/2/23
Y1 - 2018/2/23
N2 - The CHRONOS space mission concept provides time-resolved abundance for emissions and transport studies of the highly variable and highly uncertain air pollutants carbon monoxide and methane, with sub-hourly revisit rate at fine (-4 km) horizontal spatial resolution across a North American domain. CHRONOS can provide complete synoptic air pollution maps ("snapshots") of the continental domain with less than 10 min of observations. This rapid mapping enables visualization of air pollution transport simultaneously across the entire continent and enables a sentinel-like capability for monitoring evolving, or unanticipated, air pollution sources in multiple locations at the same time with high temporal resolution. CHRONOS uses a compact imaging gas filter correlation radiometer for these observations, with heritage from more than 17 years of scientific data and algorithm advances by the science teams for the Measurements of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT) instrument on NASA's Terra spacecraft in low Earth orbit. To achieve continental-scale sub-hourly sampling, the CHRONOS mission would be conducted from geostationary orbit, with the instrument hosted on a communications or meteorological platform. CHRONOS observations would contribute to an integrated observing system for atmospheric composition using surface, suborbital and satellite data with atmospheric chemistry models, as defined by the Committee on Earth Observing Satellites. Addressing the U.S. National Academy's 2007 decadal survey direction to characterize diurnal changes in tropospheric composition, CHRONOS observations would find direct societal applications for air quality management and forecasting to protect public health.
AB - The CHRONOS space mission concept provides time-resolved abundance for emissions and transport studies of the highly variable and highly uncertain air pollutants carbon monoxide and methane, with sub-hourly revisit rate at fine (-4 km) horizontal spatial resolution across a North American domain. CHRONOS can provide complete synoptic air pollution maps ("snapshots") of the continental domain with less than 10 min of observations. This rapid mapping enables visualization of air pollution transport simultaneously across the entire continent and enables a sentinel-like capability for monitoring evolving, or unanticipated, air pollution sources in multiple locations at the same time with high temporal resolution. CHRONOS uses a compact imaging gas filter correlation radiometer for these observations, with heritage from more than 17 years of scientific data and algorithm advances by the science teams for the Measurements of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT) instrument on NASA's Terra spacecraft in low Earth orbit. To achieve continental-scale sub-hourly sampling, the CHRONOS mission would be conducted from geostationary orbit, with the instrument hosted on a communications or meteorological platform. CHRONOS observations would contribute to an integrated observing system for atmospheric composition using surface, suborbital and satellite data with atmospheric chemistry models, as defined by the Committee on Earth Observing Satellites. Addressing the U.S. National Academy's 2007 decadal survey direction to characterize diurnal changes in tropospheric composition, CHRONOS observations would find direct societal applications for air quality management and forecasting to protect public health.
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U2 - 10.5194/amt-11-1061-2018
DO - 10.5194/amt-11-1061-2018
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85042652585
SN - 1867-1381
VL - 11
SP - 1061
EP - 1085
JO - Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
JF - Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
IS - 2
ER -