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Researchers To Scrutinize Megacity Pollution During
Mexico City Field Campaign
Science Daily — A team of researchers from the National
Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and other
institutions is heading to Mexico City to participate in
one of the most complex field campaigns ever undertaken
in atmospheric chemistry. From March 1 to 29, the team
will make multiple research flights in the NSF/NCAR
C-130 aircraft and operate ground instruments to
investigate the chemical and physical transformation of
air pollution as it flows downwind from Mexico City.
Mexico City, the world's third largest urban area, has
some of the worst air quality in the world.
The team's goal is to assess the pollution's impact on
regional and global air quality, climate, and
ecosystems. The results are expected to be applicable to
megacities (cities with 10 million or more inhabitants)
in other locations around the world.
"Mexico City's pollution probably doesn't have a global
impact, but all urban areas together do, and the world
is urbanizing," explains NCAR scientist Sasha Madronich,
one of the project's principal investigators. "If we can
understand the pollution impacts of Mexico City, we can
apply this new knowledge to other urban areas across the
globe."
The project, called MIRAGE (Megacity Impacts of Regional
and Global Environments), is led by NCAR in partnership
with several U.S. universities and other organizations.
MIRAGE is one component of a set of simultaneous field
campaigns collectively called Megacity Initiative: Local
and Global Research Observations (MILAGRO). This
international effort will observe and quantify air
pollution emitted by Mexico City from multiple
perspectives. Other components of MILAGRO are led by the
U.S. Department of Energy, the Molina Center on Energy
and the Environment, and NASA. As part of the broader
effort, researchers from more than 60 institutions in
the United States, Mexico, and several other nations
will convene in Mexico City to coordinate aircraft and
ground-based measurements, satellite observations, and
computer modeling. The cost of the MILAGRO campaign is
estimated to be more than $20 million, with the National
Science Foundation contributing about $10 million. NSF
is also NCAR’s primary sponsor.
NCAR researchers hope that data from MIRAGE will shed
light on four broad questions:
* How far downwind does Mexico City's pollution plume
extend?
* How are the pollutants transformed by chemical
reactions occurring downwind of the city?
* How do the pollutants affect visibility, as well as
regional and global climate?
* How do the urban pollutants interact with pollutants
from other sources, such as agricultural and forest
fires?
"We're not looking so much at pollution inside the city
because that's already fairly well known," Madronich
says. "We're looking at the outflow. For the first time
we'll have an idea of how much pollution is outside the
city and be able to understand its full life cycle."
Because air pollution is complicated, both chemically
and physically, and evolves over time and distance,
scientists have traditionally faced difficulty in
quantifying its components. The MIRAGE team will use
aircraft, ground stations, and satellite observations to
gather data on how Mexico City's air pollution ages as
it disperses in the first hours and days after emission.
Aircraft and instruments
Researchers based in Veracruz, located east of the
capital on the Gulf of Mexico, will crisscross Mexico
City's pollution plume in the C-130 aircraft. Using a
complex package of instruments, they'll make multiple
flights to sample the gases and aerosols that comprise
the plume, which usually spreads northeast from the city
toward the gulf.
Others will set up ground-based instruments at the
Technical University of Tecamac, about 25 miles (40
kilometers) northeast of Mexico City. From there, they
will also launch GPS radiosondes, which are instrument
packages attached to helium balloons that send
atmospheric measurements to the ground via radio. The
radiosondes will make vertical profiles of winds,
temperatures, and humidity from the ground through the
lower stratosphere.
Two kinds of pollutants
MIRAGE is especially significant because it focuses on
both aerosols (airborne particles of dust, soot, and
other pollutants) and gaseous pollutants (including
ozone, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide,
and hydrocarbons and their oxidation products).
"In the past there have been air campaigns during which
researchers have made lots of aerosol measurements, and
other ones during which they've emphasized gas
measurements," Madronich says. "The uniqueness of MIRAGE
is that it brings them together, allowing us to study
interactions between gases and aerosols."
Why Mexico City? Pollution During Mexico City
The researchers chose Mexico City for MIRAGE because it
is the world's third largest urban area, has some of the
worst air quality in the world, and is situated in the
tropics, as are most fast-growing megacities in
developing nations.
Current computer models for studying air pollution were
developed mainly for cities in industrialized nations,
Madronich says. They don't transfer well to megacities
in the developing world, where people are more likely to
burn coal and wood and drive vehicles that emit more
harmful chemicals.
The field campaign will also gather information about
aerosols, such as how long they endure in the atmosphere
and how they affect clouds. These insights are useful to
scientists who make computer models of global climate.
"The lifetime of organic aerosols may be longer than
climate modelers have thought, and this could have a
huge effect on climate," Madronich says.
Note: This story has been adapted from a news release
issued by National Center for Atmospheric Research.
Pollution During Mexico City
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