Abstract

Abstract. A series of high-resolution (1 km) numerical simulations with a limited-area numerical model has been performed over Reunion Island. In the dynamical context of a regular maritime flow perturbed by a major topographic obstacle such as Reunion Island, the objectives are to identify the main atmospheric circulations at local-scale over the island and to improve the understanding of local-scale transport and dispersion of pollutants emitted from local sources. To investigate the effects of topography and land surface heating on low-level flows over the island, simulations representative of austral winter were performed in idealized conditions keeping the radiative forcing plus a background east-south-easterly synoptic flux of varying strengths, typical of the prevailing trade-wind conditions. The numerical experiments show mainly that flow splitting of the trade-wind occurs around the island, with enhanced winds blowing along the coast lines parallel to the synoptic flux, due to the lateral constriction of the flow by the island and resulting Venturi effect. Blocking occurs on the island side facing the trade-wind. The north-western area on the leeside is screened from the trade-wind by high mountains, and this enables the development of diurnal thermally-induced circulations, combining downslope and land-breeze at night, and upslope and sea breeze at daytime. Flow splitting is modulated by radiative convergence toward the island at daytime, and divergence from the island at night. Stronger winds than the large-scale trade-wind occur along the coast at daytime (Venturi effect), whereas at night, the trade-wind flow is pushed few kilometres offshore by divergence of cooled air from the land. At night, the trade-wind flow is pushed few kilometres offshore by divergence of cooled air from the land. Consequently, a number of processes of pollution transport and dispersion have been identified. Vortices in the wake of the island were found to cause counterflow circulation and trapping of polluted air masses near the north-western coast. These air masses may in turn be sucked by anabatic wind systems during daytime (upslope and sea breezes) in the cirques and up to the summits of the island, and especially to Piton Maïdo (2200 m) where a new observatory of the Indian Ocean background atmosphere is being built. A "cap effect" above the mountains downstream from the volcano (to the south-east of the island), and especially above Piton Maïdo, might occur in case of development of inland and upslope breezes on the west coast. In this case, air pumped from lower layers may protect the observatory from the volcanic plume forced to pass over a "cap" of low-level air clean of volcanic emissions.

Highlights

  • A series of high-resolution numerical simulations with a limited-area numerical model has been performed over Reunion Island with the aim of better understanding of localscale transport and dispersion of pollutants emitted from local sources

  • Among the scientific questions raised in this paper, it is examined to what extent local orographic perturbations of the synoptic wind and local wind systems are responsible for vertical transport of air pollutants originating from the island boundary layer, and could affect ground-based measurements at the future Piton Maıdo observatory devoted to the monitoring of background atmospheric composition

  • In order to analyze the influence of local pollution sources on ground measurements at Piton Maıdo and discriminate it from background pollution, it was interesting to study the transport of a non-reactive pollutant, modeled by the constant emission of a passive tracer from different source points in the model

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Summary

Introduction

A series of high-resolution numerical simulations with a limited-area numerical model has been performed over Reunion Island with the aim of better understanding of localscale transport and dispersion of pollutants emitted from local sources. The objective of the present study is not to contribute to an already considerable amount of knowledge on local meteorology on islands, but rather to investigate the question of local-scale transport and dispersion of pollutants emitted from local sources in the context of a quasi-stationary and uniform maritime flow (the east-south-easterly trade-wind in our context) perturbed by a major topographic obstacle such as Reunion Island. A common concern in these studies is the influence of surface emissions and the atmospheric boundary layer on ambient meteorology and chemistry at the stations They emphasized various dynamical processes responsible for vertical transport of air pollutants originating from the lowland boundary layer, and contributing to the thermal pumping of the low-level atmospheric layers and vertical mixing over the mountains (high turbulence owing to the terrain roughness, thermally induced circulations, favored shallow and deep convection and direct orographic lifting of synoptic flows).

Environmental context
Description of the numerical experiments
Flows at the island scale
ABL influence at Piton Maıdo
Dispersion of pollutants
Dispersion of anthropogenic pollutants
Dispersion of the volcanic passive tracer
Figure 17
Findings
Conclusion and perspectives
Full Text
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