The Earth Observer January/February 1995, Vol. 7 No. 1

Atmospheric Trace Gas Measurements for the Year 2000 and Beyond

Report of NASA Workshop held on July 6-7, 1994


Chairmen: Daniel Jacob (djj@io.harvard.edu) and Conway Leovy (conway@atmos.washington.edu)
Convenors: Mark Schoeberl, Robert Joseph McNeal, james Gleason

1. INTRODUCTION

The effect of human activity on the composition of the atmosphere is an issue at the heart of global change because of its strong implications for climate, the biosphere, and public welfare. Major chemical perturbations are expected over the next century due in particular to rising human population coupled to rising fossil fuel consumption, changing patterns of agricultural production and rapid land use change, the phase-out of chlorofluorocarbons coupled to the phase-in of replacement products, and the rise in aircraft emissions including possibly a supersonic fleet in the stratosphere. This report identifies a set of critical problems in atmospheric chemistry for the year 2000 and beyond, and assesses the role of space-based measurements of the EOS program in addressing these problems.

The main driving force of atmospheric chemistry research is the need to develop sound environmental policy related to the following questions:

  1. What is the effect of human activity on stratospheric ozone? How is the UV flux at the surface of the Earth changing in response to changes in the stratospheric ozone layer?

  2. How is surface climate sensitive to the atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases and aerosols, and what factors control these concentrations?

  3. How is the oxidizing power of the atmosphere changing with time, and what is the influence of human activity?

  4. How is regional air quality degraded by industrial and other anthropogenic emissions in populated areas of the world?

Answers to these questions require substantial improvement of our current knowledge of the physical, chemical, and biological processes affecting atmospheric chemistry. Major scientific issues needing to be resolved are:

  1. the factors responsible for large-scale trends in stratospheric ozone;

  2. the processes controlling the concentrations of major greenhouse gases including water vapor, CO2, methane, N2O, and ozone;

  3. the mechanisms regulating the concentrations of ozone and other oxidants in the troposphere; and

  4. the sources, global distributions, and chemical and optical properties of the atmospheric aerosol.

We begin with a brief review of measurement platforms (ground-, aircraft-, and space-based) expected to be operational for atmospheric chemistry observations in the year 2000 and beyond. We then discuss a strategy for effectively using these platforms to address these issues.

2. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY MEASUREMENT PLATFORMS FOR THE YEAR 2000 AND BEYOND.

2.1 Ground- and aircraft-based platforms

A. Ground-based sensors

A wide range of atmospheric chemistry measurements are made from the ground. These include: ambient concentrations of stable gases, radicals, and aerosols; wet and dry deposition fluxes; vertical profiles of atmospheric composition and structure by active sensors such as LIDAR; and atmospheric structure and composition measured by microwave sounders. As instrumentation evolves and the scientific questions are refined, strategies for deploying these instruments have demanded more rigorous experimental designs. Complex arrays of instruments are common, allowing simultaneous observations of a wide variety of species in order to characterize the oxidizing power of the atmosphere.

Ground-based observations are increasingly made for long periods to observe seasonal and interannual changes and long-term trends. The ALE/GAGE network for CFCs and NOAA's Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory (CMDL) network for greenhouse gases are excellent examples of long-term monitoring programs. The Network for the Detection of Stratospheric Change (NDSC), is another example of a coordinated, long-term, international ground-based stratospheric monitoring program. Multiple instruments measuring a variety of stratospheric species (profile and total column O3, H2O, NO2, aerosols, ...) are located at five sites spread from the Arctic to the Antarctic. In addition to monitoring programs like NDSC, short-term, intensive, ground-based programs are required to provide a more comprehensive set of measurements needed to elucidate the processes responsible for the long-term changes. These integrated experiments, involving closely coordinated measurements by aircraft and ground stations, have evolved rapidly (for example, the ABLE missions, BOREAS, MLOPEX) to provide sets of measurements spanning a wide range of spatial and temporal scales.

The increasing sophistication of deployed ground-based sensors will provide important opportunities for linking these observations to observations from space. Satellite measurements extend local measurements to the global domain, thereby making it possible to address global-scale atmospheric chemistry problems. However, the satellites measure radiances, while in situ techniques usually measure the actual quantities of interest (e.g., concentrations) by techniques other than radiance measurements. In order to provide a quantitatively reliable set of observations in the year 2000 and beyond, it will be important to continue to develop and deploy integrated experimental designs that enhance and exploit complementarity between ground-based and satellite sensors and validate the satellite measurements. Even ground-based sensors that measure radiance, such as passive microwave, provide valuable checks and enhancements of satellite measurements derived from radiances because of complementarity of point of view and measurement scale.

B. Airborne sensors

Platforms for airborne atmospheric chemistry measurements include NASA's ER-2, DC-8, and P-3; NCAR's WB-57F; and unmanned airborne vehicles (UAVs). Each aircraft has unique capabilities and limitations, summarized in Table 1. A wide range of instruments has been developed for airborne in situ measurements, including short-lived free radicals (ClO, OH) which are very difficult to measure at ground level. Also, a unique airborne ozone-aerosol lidar has been developed. These instruments potentially provide data for concentrations of radicals from all of the major families important in the atmosphere, for short- and long-lived tracers, and for aerosol size distributions and composition.

table of platforms for airborne atmospheric chemistry measurements
Table 1. Platforms for Airborne Atmospheric Chemistry Measurements

Aircraft measurements offer superb capabilities for accurate measurements over a large range at fine spatial scales; hence, airborne observations should provide a primary source of "ground truth" for satellite sensors and a keystone for integrated experiments linking ground-based measurements, small-scale process studies, in situ (aircraft) observations, and satellite measurements. However, aircraft operate over limited regions and time periods, and they are further constrained by operational limitations (weather, proximate airfields). The best approach to obtain truly global data sets of high quality usually requires a combination of ground-based, airborne, and satellite observations.

2.2 Space-based platforms.

The current EOS program includes six satellite instruments dedicated to atmospheric chemistry measurements: HIRDLS, MLS, MOPITT, SAGE III, TES and ODUS (an instrument to be provided by Japan for flight on CHEM-1). The capabilities of each of these instruments are summarized in Table 2. MOPITT (to be launched in June 1998 on the EOS AM-1 platform) will provide 3-D mapping of CO (a key gas regulating the oxidizing power of the troposphere) and horizontal mapping of the atmospheric column of methane. HIRDLS, MLS, TES, and ODUS (to be launched together on the CHEM-1 platform in December 2002) will map an extensive ensemble of trace species (HIRDLS and MLS in the stratosphere and upper troposphere and TES in the lower stratosphere and troposphere, with ODUS providing horizontal mapping of the atmospheric column of ozone). SAGE III (to be launched in August 1998 on the Russian Meteor 3M-1 satellite) will provide 3-D mapping of ozone, water vapor, aerosols, NO2, and some other species. EOSP, on the EOS AM-2 platform, will measure the optical depth and polarization of the tropospheric and stratospheric aerosol. Prior to EOSP, two other EOS instruments will be monitoring atmospheric aerosol burdens. The MODIS (AM-1,-2, PM-1) instruments will retrieve aerosol optical depth and particle sizes in a similar fashion to the current NOAA/AVHRR aerosol measurements. More wavelengths have been added to improve the aerosol retrieval over land. The MISR (AM-1,-2) instruments will measure aerosol optical depth and particle sizes using simultaneous multiple wavelengths and multiple zenith angles.

table of EOS trace species instruments
Table 2. EOS Trace Species Instruments

3. ADVANTAGES AND LIMITATIONS OF SPACE-BASED MEASUREMENTS.

The obvious merit of space-based measurements is their unique capability for continuous global mapping of the concentrations of trace species. This mapping is critical for understanding sources, sinks, and chemical and dynamical processes controlling species with short atmospheric lifetimes (a few months or less) and, hence, large spatial and temporal variability. In addition, space-based measurements can measure atmospheric composition at higher altitudes than can be conveniently attained by conventional sampling means.

The drawbacks of space-based measurements are high cost, lower spatial resolution, limitations in instrument sensitivity, and limitations in the number of species that can be measured. In situ measurements can achieve better accuracy and spatial resolution, at lower cost. Consequently, in situ measurements from the surface and from aircraft will remain the approach of choice for many studies that focus on detailed processes, especially in the troposphere. For long-lived gases with comparatively uniform concentrations in the atmosphere, ground-based sampling at a limited network of sites provides a cheaper alternative to space-based or aircraft observations.

For these reasons judicious synergism between space-, ground-, and aircraft-based measurements holds the key for a successful atmospheric chemistry research program over the next decades. While results of process studies based primarily on aircraft and/or ground-based measurements require satellite measurements in order to extend them to the global domain, space-based measurements can also play an extremely valuable role in the design of process studies by identifying a specific problem. A good example is the tropospheric ozone maximum over the south Atlantic in spring, which was first identified by analysis of TOMS and SAGE II satellite measurements and was later confirmed and interpreted with aircraft observations in the GTE/NASA/TRACE-A expedition.

Complementarity between in situ and space-based measurements is a key to solving atmospheric chemistry problems of global or regional scale. Neither measurement model provides complete coverage in terms of time and space scales, resolutions, or species type, but well-coordinated use of all types of measurements is capable of addressing the atmospheric chemistry questions raised in this document.

4. MAJOR STRATOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY PROBLEMS IN THE YEAR 2000 AND BEYOND.

In this section, we anticipate what the major scientific questions are likely to be, show how satellite, in situ, and ground-based data may be jointly used to address them, and identify some possible gaps in existing plans.

4.1 What controls the concentration of ozone in the lower stratosphere?

Both the total column ozone abundance and the net radiation at the surface are sensitive to changes in ozone concentration in the lowest part of the stratosphere. Moreover, interannual and interdecadal trends attributed to chlorofluorocarbon (CFC) interactions with polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) and sulfate aerosols are large in this layer, and the interactive chemical and dynamical processes which control trace species concentrations are complex. Exchanges of air between polar regions and mid-latitudes, between tropics and mid-latitudes, and between the troposphere and tropical/mid-latitude lower stratosphere are all important factors influencing changes in this region. Fundamental gaps in understanding remain, and there will remain a need for improved quantitative understanding of both the chemical and dynamical processes in this layer in the year 2000 and beyond.

The data sets will serve two central purposes: (1) Monitor change in the ozone layer with enough resolution and specificity to precisely locate changes and their relationship to the position of the tropopause, and measure variables that cause or modulate ozone change. In addition to ozone, other key variables include especially ClO, aerosols, NOx, water vapor, temperature, and meteorological tracers; (2) Obtain sufficiently specific information for quantitative models of composition of this region under a wide range of conditions.

With changing concentrations of CFCs and their substitutes, with a possible large increase in high altitude aircraft operations, and with probable changes in temperature and dynamical structure arising from continued increases of greenhouse gases, changes in the ozone concentration in this layer are likely to occur well past the year 2000. Scientists in 2010 will need to have enough information on ozone and ancillary trace species to understand basic ozone changes.

The combination of stratospheric chemistry measurements on the EOS CHEM payload is well suited to address this question. The constituents to be measured in this region of the atmosphere include O3, ClO, NO2, ClONO2, HCl, HNO3, N2O5, CFCs, H2O, and CH4, as well as aerosols and temperature. These measurements will extend through the tropopause region into the upper troposphere, and will have vertical resolutions of 2-3 km (MLS) and 1 km (HIRDLS). These instruments are complementary in that HIRDLS will have high resolution in longitude as well as latitude, while MLS will be unaffected by aerosol loading and will be able to make measurements in high aerosol or cloudy regions which are not accessible to HIRDLS. In addition, the SAGE III proposed for launch in a lower inclination orbit will provide much-more-definitive information on aerosol distribution and properties and important baseline measurements on a number of the key constituents in the lower stratosphere and cloud-free portions of the upper troposphere with high vertical resolution and very high sensitivity and precision. Ground-based measurements and in situ measurements will be necessary to provide calibration verification for the satellite retrievals. Ground-based profilers will also be needed to provide more detailed local vertical structure information where profiling capability is available.

One of the most demanding problems is that of quantifying stratosphere-troposphere exchange under a wide range of circumstances. For mid-latitudes, this will require a combination of in situ aircraft observations for measurements on horizontal scales of the order of 100 km - 500 km and vertical scales down to the order of 100 meters. While there exist many aircraft mesoscale studies of the tropopause region, the combination of aircraft measurements with the satellite capabilities mentioned above and modeling capabilities that are now evolving, particularly the capability for modeling lagrangian trajectories, should make possible new breakthroughs in quantitative understanding of stratosphere-troposphere exchange in the EOS time frame.

Assuming that the base EOS CHEM capabilities become available in 2003, two additional science issues arise: (1) What UV flux measurement capabilities are required? (2) Should EOS CHEM include measurements of OH or other HOx radicals that could be obtained by enhancement of the MLS instrument?

The answer to the first question is that UV flux measurements must be available at the same time that EOS CHEM measurements are obtained since it is impossible to obtain closure on the chemistry without this measurement. Although, on long time scales like the solar cycle, UV flux variations are well correlated with proxies such as the 10.7 cm flux, this is not necessarily true on the shorter time scale of the solar rotation. The current plan to fly SOLSTICE on some MTPE mission in the post-2000 time frame is endorsed. There is a need to ensure that SOLSTICE measurements be available when EOS CHEM is flying.

It was the consensus of the group that it is very important to obtain OH (and possibly HO2) measurements, and that the unique opportunity to do this with MLS on EOS CHEM should be used. Although there are a few in situ aircraft or long-path balloon measurements of OH in the stratosphere, the MLS measurement of OH is the only foreseen opportunity to obtain global measurements of this important radical. The absence of global OH measurements is a serious gap in the post-UARS time frame until EOS CHEM since: (1) OH controls the conversion of CH4 to H2O, (2) reactions of HOx radicals are the most important loss mechanisms for ozone in both the lowest and highest regions of the stratosphere, (3) reactions with OH control the rate of oxidation of sulfur gases (SO2, OCS) to sulfate aerosol, (4) OH is in competition with heterogeneous chemistry in controlling the transfers between radical and reservoir species in both the NOy and Clx systems (e.g., OH plus NO2 to produce HNO3 in competition with both the reverse reaction [OH + HNO3] and the reaction ClO plus NO2 to produce chlorine nitrate, and OH plus HCl to produce free chlorine and water).

Although OH is often specified in models in terms of concentrations of other species, it is necessary to measure the dependence of OH on these concentrations of other species over a wide range of situations in order to validate the applicability of models. OH may be a "well-behaved" constituent under a wide range of circumstances, as must be assumed in models in the absence of measurements to the contrary, but it is essential that this assumption be tested.

4.2 What controls the concentration of ozone in the mid- and upper stratosphere?

Although changes in the ozone concentration in this region are of less importance for changes in the total column ozone and, therefore, less important for UV fluxes at the surface, they are still significant. There are important gaps in our understanding of the processes controlling ozone concentration.

Moreover, changes in ozone concentration in this region affect the thermal and dynamical structure of the stratosphere, which can feed back to changes in structure and composition of the lower stratosphere. Gaps in our understanding of the feedback processes include: (1) a continuing discrepancy between models and observation in the "photochemical region" around 40 km; (2) incomplete understanding of the transition between gas phase and heterogeneous chemistry in the lower stratosphere (25-35 km).

The MLS, HIRDLS, and SAGE III satellite measurements described above also apply to this region, and will provide key global information for both monitoring and process studies. Because of the central role of HOx chemistry, the augmented MLS capability to measure OH and possibly HO2) described above will be very important for closing the unresolved questions for this layer. In situ measurements and profiles from ground stations will also be important in this layer for validating satellite retrievals.

5. MAJOR TROPOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY PROBLEMS IN THE YEAR 2000 AND BEYOND.

We examine here how a proper combination of space-, ground-, and aircraft-based platforms can be used in an optimal way for addressing critical tropospheric chemistry problems in the next decade.

5.1 What factors control the concentrations of the major greenhouse gases, water vapor, CO2, methane, N2O, HCFCs, and ozone?

Continuous observation of trends of the major greenhouse gases is essential for an assessment of human influence on climate. For CO2, methane, N2O, and HCFCs, lifetimes are sufficiently long to allow thorough mixing in the troposphere. Monitoring of trends for these gases is best achieved at low cost with a limited network of ground-based stations (as presently implemented by the NOAA/CMDL network). By contrast, water vapor and ozone have shorter lifetimes and hence considerable spatial variability in the atmosphere in general. The radiation budget at the surface of the Earth and in the lower troposphere is particularly sensitive to water vapor in the upper troposphere. The photochemical formation of ozone in the upper troposphere makes a very important but uncertain contribution to the total tropospheric ozone budget. Thus, long-term global measurements of both ozone and water vapor on time and space scales that can be related to synoptic activity and to tropical mesoscale convection systems are of great importance. Such measurements are very difficult to obtain by in situ or surface-based techniques, but there is excellent potential for obtaining them from the combination of MLS and HIRDLS on EOS CHEM. Indeed, recent measurements from the UARS satellite have demonstrated the utility of MLS for obtaining upper tropospheric water vapor.

Interpretation of trends in greenhouse gases requires a mechanistic understanding of their sources and sinks. Chemical issues related to the origin of ozone and to the oxidation of methane and HCFCs are particularly relevant to a space-based program and are discussed in the next section. Gas exchange with the biosphere and with the ocean are critical processes for CO2, methane, and N2O; quantifying the exchange fluxes has proven to be exceedingly difficult because a large number of variables are involved and these vary greatly in both space and time. These variables control concentrations of inorganic carbon, carbon dioxide, and other gases in the surface waters of the ocean. We expect that advances in our understanding will be largely driven by surface measurements from ships and buoys and eddy correlation measurements from towers and aircraft, with some valuable additions from ground- and aircraft-based measurements of isotopic ratios. The role of space-based measurements will be largely limited to providing information on surface properties and land use change. Space-based measurements can contribute to our understanding of the tropospheric methane budget. Both MOPITT and TES can measure methane concentrations from space with 1% sensitivity, and this information may prove useful for identifying large sources of methane.

5.2. What controls the concentrations of tropospheric oxidants, including, in particular, ozone and OH?

Ozone, OH, and other oxidants such as H2 O2 are produced in the troposphere by a complicated ensemble of photochemical reactions involving nitrogen oxides, CO, hydrocarbons, and water vapor. The chemistry involved is not yet fully understood, but large advances are expected over the next decade. Emerging questions focus on the role of heterogeneous chemistry (reactions in aerosols and clouds) and the origin of NOx. Further progress will require advances in chemical instrumentation and well-designed field experiments to study the chemistry on a small scale. It is unlikely that space-based measurements can play much role in the progress of this science.

Determination of the global trend of OH concentrations is of particular importance as reaction with OH is the main removal pathway for a large number of trace gases. Mass balances on methylchloro-form measured in surface air have been particularly useful in providing a surrogate measurement of the global mean OH concentration. This measurement will become increasingly reliable over the next decade as methylchloro-form is phased out by the Montreal protocol, thus removing the difficulty of estimating emissions. Over the longer term horizon, HCFCs can provide an excellent surrogate to replace methylchloroform. The tropospheric lifetimes of the major HCFCs are sufficiently long to allow thorough mixing; surface measurements at a limited network of sites, as presently conducted by NOAA/CMDL, are adequate.

Space-based measurements can play a critical role in our understanding of tropospheric oxidants by global mapping of the oxidant precursors (NOx, CO, hydrocarbons, water vapor, in addition to ozone itself). All these species have short atmospheric lifetimes and hence show considerable spatial and temporal variability. Aircraft have so far been the platform of choice for mapping the distribution of oxidant precursors, but aircraft measurements are necessarily limited in space and time. Space-based measurements are the only practical approach for global observation. As can be seen in Table 2, sufficient resolution can be achieved from space for global mapping of CO (MOPITT, TES), NO and HNO3 (TES), water vapor (SAGE III, TES), and ozone (SAGE III, TES). Continuous global observation of oxidant precursors from space takes on particular importance as source distributions of these precursors are expected to change substantially over the next decades due to growth of aircraft emissions, land use change and industrial development in the tropics, and changing patterns of agriculture.

Transport from the stratosphere is a significant source of tropospheric ozone and NOx. The magnitude of the cross-tropopause flux is still uncertain, and the mechanisms for stratosphere-troposphere exchange are the subject of debate, which is likely to continue into the next decade. Much of stratosphere-troposphere exchange appears to take place at the mesoscale, and is therefore best investigated at the process level by in situ aircraft measurements (the projected ~1 km vertical resolution of satellite measurements is not sufficient by itself). It is, however, likely that the forcing of stratosphere-troposphere exchange takes place on a larger scale. Global mapping from satellite of tracers of stratosphere-troposphere exchange (e.g., N 2O, CH4, HCFCs, H2O) can provide useful constraints for testing the simulation of cross-tropopause transport in global meteorological models.

5.3 What are the sources and properties of the tropospheric aerosol?

Scattering of solar radiation by aerosols cools the surface of the Earth. It has been argued that the negative radiative forcing caused by the increase in anthropogenic sulfate aerosols over the past century could have largely offset the positive forcing from greenhouse gases in some regions. Reliable assessment is, however, hampered by our poor knowledge of aerosol properties. Specific issues relate to the chemical composition, size distribution, and optical properties of the aerosol; its nucleation, growth, and removal; its global distribution and the magnitude of human influence; and the role of aerosols in modifying the formation and microstructure of clouds. It is likely that many questions will remain at the process level in the next decade, and in situ measurements offer the best means to address them.

Space-based measurements must, however, play a critical role in quantifying aerosol effects on climate by providing a global mapping of aerosol optical depth along with indicators of other aerosol properties (size distribution, chemical composition). Of particular importance is the identification of temporal trends in global aerosol concentrations as driven for example by human activity, volcanic eruptions, windblown soil dust, or large fires. Preliminary studies using AVHRR data indicate particularly high aerosol optical depths over the oceans downwind of the arid continents, suggesting that soil dust (which interacts with both shortwave and longwave radiation) may be of particular radiative interest. Such information could not have been obtained by other means. Measurements from the EOS instruments (MODIS, MISR, EOSP) will improve considerably on the AVHRR data by global mapping of the aerosol optical depth and by polarization measurements (EOSP) from which size distribution and aerosol phase information can be retrieved.

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