Remote sensing of exposure to NO2: Satellite versus ground-based measurement in a large urban

Bechle, MJ; Millet, DB; Marshall, JD

HERO ID

1677424

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2013

Language

English

HERO ID 1677424
In Press No
Year 2013
Title Remote sensing of exposure to NO2: Satellite versus ground-based measurement in a large urban
Authors Bechle, MJ; Millet, DB; Marshall, JD
Journal Atmospheric Environment
Volume 69
Page Numbers 345-353
Abstract Remote sensing may be a useful tool for exploring spatial variability of air pollution exposure within an urban area. To evaluate the extent to which satellite data from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) can resolve urban-scale gradients in ground-level nitrogen dioxide (NO2) within a large urban area, we compared estimates of surface NO2 concentrations derived from OMI measurements and US EPA ambient monitoring stations. OMI, aboard NASA's Aura satellite, provides daily afternoon (similar to 13:30 local time) measurements of NO2 tropospheric column abundance. We used scaling factors (surface-to-column ratios) to relate satellite column measurements to ground-level concentrations. We compared 4138 sets of paired data for 25 monitoring stations in the South Coast Air Basin of California for all of 2005. OMI measurements include more data gaps than the ground monitors (60% versus 5% of available data, respectively), owing to cloud contamination and imposed limits on pixel size. The spatial correlation between OMI columns and corrected in situ measurements is strong (r=0.93 for annual average data), indicating that the within-urban spatial signature of surface NO2 is well resolved by the satellite sensor. Satellite-based surface estimates employing scaling factors from an urban model provide a reliable measure (annual mean bias: -13%; seasonal mean bias: <1% [spring] to -22% [fall]) of fine-scale surface NO2. We also find that OMI provides good spatial density in the study region (average area [km(2)] per measurement: 730 for the satellite sensor vs. 1100 for the monitors). Our findings indicate that satellite observations of NO2 from the OMI sensor provide a reliable measure of spatial variability in ground-level NO2 exposure for a large urban area. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Doi 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2012.11.046
Wosid WOS:000315932800037
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword OMI; nitrogen dioxide; urban air quality; remote sensing; exposure