Optimizing global CO emission estimates using a four-dimensional variational data assimilation system and surface network observations
We apply a four-dimensional variational (4DVAR)
data assimilation system to optimize carbon monoxide
(CO) emissions for 2003 and 2004 and to reduce the uncertainty
of emission estimates from individual sources using
the chemistry transport model TM5. The system is designed
to assimilate large (satellite) datasets, but in the current study
only a limited amount of surface network observations from
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Earth
System Research Laboratory (NOAA/ESRL) Global Monitoring
Division (GMD) is used to test the 4D-VAR system.
By design, the system is capable to adjust the emissions in
such a way that the posterior simulation reproduces background
CO mixing ratios and large-scale pollution events at
background stations. Uncertainty reduction up to 60% in
yearly emissions is observed over well-constrained regions
and the inferred emissions compare well with recent studies
for 2004. However, with the limited amount of data from
the surface network, the system becomes data sparse resulting
in a large solution space. Sensitivity studies have shown
that model uncertainties (e.g., vertical distribution of biomass
burning emissions and the OH field) and the prior inventories
used, influence the inferred emission estimates. Also,
since the observations only constrain total CO emissions, the
4D-VAR system has difficulties in separating anthropogenic
and biogenic sources in particular. The inferred emissions
are validated with NOAA aircraft data over North America
and the agreement is significantly improved from the prior
to posterior simulation. Validation with the Measurements
Of Pollution In The Troposphere (MOPITT) instrument version
4 (V4) shows a slight improved agreement over the wellconstrained
Northern Hemisphere and in the tropics (except
for the African continent). However, the model simulation
with posterior emissions underestimates MOPITT CO total
columns on the remote Southern Hemisphere (SH) by about
10 %. This is caused by a reduction in SH CO sources mainly
due to surface stations on the high southern latitudes.
HOOGHIEMSTRA P.B.;
KROL M.;
MEIRINK Jan Fokke;
BERGAMASCHI Peter;
VAN DER WERF G. R.;
NOVELLI P.C.;
ABEN Ilse;
ROECKMANN Thomas;
2012-02-03
COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
JRC62865
1680-7316,
http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/11/4705/2011/acp-11-4705-2011.html,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC62865,
10.5194/acp-11-4705-2011,
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