Abstract
<p>Satellite observations of the high-resolution instrument TROPOMI on Sentinel-5P make it possible to measure nitrogen dioxide (NO<sub>2</sub>) at city level and even to quantify the variability of NO<sub>x</sub> emissions and lifetimes on a seasonal and daily basis.<br>NO<sub>2</sub> is an air pollutant and especially in cities of particular importance due to the large number and strength of emission sources in combination with people living nearby exposing their health to the polluted air. To quantify nitrogen oxide emissions and lifetimes with their variability in space and time, satellite data is especially suited as it provides daily global coverage and large number of measurements. The TROPOspheric Monitoring Instrument (TROPOMI) on Sentinel-5P, launched in October 2017, provides, thanks to its higher spatial resolution when compared to previous satellite instruments, the possibility of detailed investigations on lifetimes and emissions of air pollutants.<br>Two years of TROPOMI NO<sub>2</sub> data with a spatial resolution of up to 3.5 km x 5.5 km together with ECMWF ERA5 wind data are analyzed. The NO<sub>2 </sub>data around a source is linked to the ERA5 wind data and rotated to a uniform wind direction to get clear emission patterns. Out of these two-dimensional maps of the mean NO<sub>2</sub> distribution, one dimensional line densities are calculated by integration across wind direction. Lifetimes and emission fluxes are calculated for different NO<sub>x</sub> sources such as cities and power plants distributed over the world. They are compared among each other and to bottom-up emission inventories. Seasonal variability and weekday versus weekend effects in lifetimes and emissions are discussed.</p>
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