Abstract

Abstract. The majority of ground-based aerosols observations are limited to fixed locations, narrowing the knowledge on their spatial variability. In order to overcome this issue, a compact Mobile Aerosol Monitoring System (MAMS) was developed to explore the aerosol vertical and spatial variability. This mobile laboratory is equipped with a micropulse lidar, a sun photometer and an aerosol spectrometer. It is distinguished from other transportable platforms through its ability to perform on-road measurements and its unique feature lies in the sun photometer's capacity for tracking the sun during motion. The system presents a great flexibility, being able to respond quickly in case of sudden aerosol events such as pollution episodes, dust, fire or volcano outbreaks. On-road mapping of aerosol physical parameters such as attenuated aerosol backscatter, aerosol optical depth, particle number and mass concentration and size distribution is achieved through the MAMS. The performance of remote sensing instruments on-board has been evaluated through intercomparison with instruments in reference networks (i.e. AERONET and EARLINET), showing that the system is capable of providing high quality data. This also illustrates the application of such a system for instrument intercomparison field campaigns. Applications of the mobile system have been exemplified through two case studies in northern France. MODIS AOD data was compared to ground-based mobile sun photometer data. A good correlation was observed with R2 of 0.76, showing the usefulness of the mobile system for validation of satellite-derived products. The performance of BSC-DREAM8b dust model has been tested by comparison of results from simulations for the lidar–sun-photometer derived extinction coefficient and mass concentration profiles. The comparison indicated that observations and the model are in good agreement in describing the vertical variability of dust layers. Moreover, on-road measurements of PM10 were compared with modelled PM10 concentrations and with ATMO Hauts-de-France and AIRPARIF air quality in situ measurements, presenting an excellent agreement in horizontal spatial representativity of PM10. This proves a possible application of mobile platforms for evaluating the chemistry-models performances.

Highlights

  • Aerosols are a variable component of the atmosphere impacting air quality and climate

  • In this work we show the application of GRASP-Aerosol Optical Depths (AOD) inversion to the onroad PLASMA sun photometer measurements

  • Measurements of spectral AOD with 0.02 uncertainty are achieved with the sun photometer, while extinction coefficient profiles with an uncertainty of 15–25 % and mass concentrations profiles with an uncertainty of 35–40 % can be derived from the synergy of different instruments on-board the mobile system

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosols are a variable component of the atmosphere impacting air quality and climate. Popovici et al.: On-road aerosol remote sensing and in situ measurements ton et al, 2005), and the EARLINET/ACTRIS (Aerosol, Clouds and Trace gases Research Infrastructure Network; Pappalardo et al, 2014), or organised in national surface networks, dedicated to air quality monitoring (ATMO France, http://www.atmo-france.org/, last access: 30 March 2018). Such observations offer capabilities for long-term monitoring of aerosol properties and evaluation of trends, but they are limited over fixed locations. In this work we exemplify this direction on mobile measurements

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