Abstract

The study of anthropogenic carbon monoxide (CO) emissions is crucial to investigate anthropogenic activities. Assuming the anthropogenic CO emissions accounted for the super majority of the winter CO fluxes in western Europe, they could be roughly estimated by the inversion approach. The CO fluxes and concentrations of four consecutive winter seasons (i.e., December–February) in western Europe since 2017 were estimated by a regional CO flux inversion system based on the Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry (WRF-Chem) and the Data Assimilation Research Testbed (DART). The CO retrievals from the Measurements Of Pollution In The Troposphere instrument (MOPITT) version 8 level 2 multi-spectral Thermal InfraRed (TIR)/Near-InfraRed (NIR) CO retrieval data products were assimilated by the inversion system. The analyses of the MOPITT data used by the inversion system indicated that the mean averaging kernel row sums of the surface level was about 0.25, and the difference percentage of the surface-level retrievals relative to a priori CO-mixing ratios was 14.79%, which was similar to that of the other levels. These results suggested the MOPITT’s surface-level observations contained roughly the same amount of information as the other levels. The inverted CO fluxes of the four winter seasons were 6198.15 kilotons, 4939.72 kilotons, 4697.80 kilotons, and 5456.19 kilotons, respectively. Based on the assumption, the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) inventories were used to evaluate the accuracy of the inverted CO fluxes. The evaluation results indicated that the differences between the inverted CO fluxes and UNFCCC inventories of the three winter seasons of 2017–2019 were 13.36%, −4.59%, and −4.76%, respectively. Detailed surface-CO concentrations and XCO comparative analyses between the experimental results and the external Community Atmosphere Model with Chemistry (CAM-Chem) results and the MOPITT data were conducted. The comparative analysis results indicated that the experimental results of the winter season of 2017 were obviously affected by high boundary conditions. The CO concentrations results of the experiments were also evaluated by the CO observation data from Integrated Carbon Observation System (ICOS), the average Mean Bias Error (MBE), and the Root Mean Square Error (RMSE) between the CO concentrations results of the inversion system, and the ICOS observations were −22.43 ppb and 57.59 ppb, respectively. The MBE and RMSE of the inversion system were 17.53-ppb and 4.17-ppb better than those of the simulation-only parallel experiments, respectively.

Highlights

  • Estimating anthropogenic Carbon monoxide (CO) flux requires the quantification of a CO budget determined by atmospheric sources, atmospheric sinks, and surface-CO emissions

  • The analyses of the MOPV8J data used by the inversion system indicated that the mean averaging kernel row sums of the surface level was about 0.25, and the difference percentage of the surface-level retrievals relative to a priori CO-mixing ratios was 14.79%, which was similar to that of the other levels

  • Compared with the prior CO fluxes, the inverted CO fluxes of the four winter seasons increased by 95.53%, 52.27%, 37.16%, and

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Carbon monoxide (CO), causing indirect positive radiative forcing of 0.23 Wm−2 at the global scale [1], is an important trace gas in the atmosphere, being a marker of Remote Sens. Estimating anthropogenic CO flux requires the quantification of a CO budget determined by atmospheric sources, atmospheric sinks, and surface-CO emissions. The atmospheric sources of CO, mainly from the oxidation of hydrocarbons such as methane (CH4 ) and Non-Methane Volatile Organic Compounds (NMVOCs), account for about half of the atmospheric CO burden, and the surface-CO emissions contribute the remainder [6–10]. Anthropogenic CO fluxes account for the dominant part of surface-CO emissions [5,14,15]. The study of anthropogenic CO fluxes is crucial to investigations of CO’s atmospheric burden, trends, and its influences on radiative forcing, as well as to help verify anthropogenic CO2 inventories through observations, and to provide supports for the global stocktake

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call