| David E. Steitz Headquarters, Washington, DC (Phone: 202/358-1730) Lynn Chandler Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD (Phone: 301/614-5562) Anatta NCAR Media Relations/UCAR Communications, Boulder, CO (Phone: 303/497-8604) |
May 30, 2001 |
RELEASE: 01-102
NEW NASA/CSA MONITOR PROVIDES GLOBAL AIR POLLUTION VIEW FROM SPACE
The most complete view ever assembled of the world's air pollution churning
through the atmosphere, crossing continents and oceans, has been produced
by NASA's Terra spacecraft. For the first time, policymakers and scientists
now have a way to identify the major sources of air pollution and can
closely track where the pollution goes, anywhere on Earth.
The new global air pollution monitor onboard Terra is the innovative
Measurements of Pollution in the Troposphere, or MOPITT experiment, which
was contributed to the Terra mission by the Canadian Space Agency. The
instrument was developed by Canadian scientists at the University of
Toronto and built by COM DEV International of Cambridge, Ontario. The data
was processed by a team at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric
Research (NCAR). MOPITT is making the first long-term global observations
of the air pollutant carbon monoxide as Terra circles the Earth from pole
to pole, 16 times every day.
"With these new observations you clearly see that air pollution is much
more than a local problem. It's a global issue," said John Gille, MOPITT
principal investigator at NCAR in Boulder, CO. "Much of the air pollution
that humans generate comes from natural sources such as large fires that
travel great distances and affects areas far from the source."
The first MOPITT observations are being released at the annual American
Geophysical Union spring meeting in Boston, MA.
The most dramatic features, taken from last year from March to December,
are the immense clouds of carbon monoxide from grassland and forest fires
in Africa and South America. The plumes slowly travel across the Southern
Hemisphere as far as Australia during the dry season in this part of the
world.
Gille was surprised to discover a strong source of carbon monoxide in
Southeast Asia. The air pollution plume from this region moves over the
Pacific Ocean and reaches North America, frequently at fairly high
concentrations, according to Gille. While fires are the major contributor
to these carbon monoxide plumes, he suspects, at times, industrial sources
may also be a factor.
"The MOPITT observations represent a powerful new tool for identifying and
quantifying pollution sources and for observing the transport of pollution
on international and global scales," said atmospheric chemist Daniel J.
Jacob, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, who used MOPITT data this spring
in a major field campaign to study air pollution from Asia. "Such
information will help us improve our understanding of the linkages between
air pollution and global environmental change, and it will likely play a
pivotal role in the development of international environmental policy."
MOPITT also captured the extensive air pollution generated by the forest
fires in the western United States last summer. A major source of air
pollution during the wintertime in the Northern Hemisphere is the burning
of fossils fuels for home heating and transportation, which can be seen
wafting across much of hemisphere.
Although MOPITT cannot distinguish between individual industrial sources in
the same city, it can map different sources that cover a few hundred square
miles. This is accurate enough to differentiate air pollution from a major
metropolitan area, for example, from a major fire in a national forest.
About half of the global emissions of carbon monoxide are caused by human
activities.
Carbon monoxide is not only a hazardous air pollutant itself, it is also a
chemical compound that produces ozone, a greenhouse gas that is a human
health hazard. MOPITT sees carbon monoxide in the atmosphere from 2 to 3
miles above the surface, where it interacts with other gases and forms
ozone. This pollutant can move upward to altitudes where it can be blown
rapidly for great distances or it can move downward to the surface.
Carbon monoxide is a byproduct of the incomplete burning of fossil fuels by
cars, industry, and home heating and the burning of natural organic matter
such as wood. By tracking plumes of carbon monoxide, scientists are able to
track the movements of other pollutants such as nitrogen oxides that are
also produced by the same combustion processes but cannot be directly
detected from space.
Animations and images of the first results from MOPITT are available at:
http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/gsfc/earth/terra/co.htm