Entrainment of stratospheric air and Asian pollution by the convective boundary layer in the southwestern U.S.
Résumé
A series of deep stratospheric intrusions in late May 2013 increased the daily maximum 8 h surface ozone (O 3) concentrations to more than 70 parts per billion by volume (ppbv) at rural and urban surface monitors in California and Nevada. This influx of ozone-rich lower stratospheric air and entrained Asian pollution persisted for more than 5 days and contributed to exceedances of the 2008 8 h national ambient air quality standard of 75 ppbv on 21 and 25 May in Clark County, NV. Exceedances would also have occurred on 22 and 23 May had the new standard of 70 ppbv been in effect. In this paper, we examine this episode using lidar measurements from a high-elevation site on Angel Peak, NV, and surface measurements from NOAA, the Clark County, Nevada Department of Air Quality, the Environmental Protection Agency Air Quality System, and the Nevada Rural Ozone Initiative. These measurements, together with analyses from the National Centers for Environmental Prediction/North American Regional Reanalysis;
Domaines
Océan, AtmosphèreOrigine | Fichiers éditeurs autorisés sur une archive ouverte |
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