Title of article
An online coupled meteorological and air quality modeling study of the effect of complex terrain on the regional transport and transformation of air pollutants over the Western United States
Author/Authors
Dongchul Kim، نويسنده , , William R. Stockwell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
16
From page
4006
To page
4021
Abstract
One of the most prominent of characteristics of the western United States that affects its meteorology is the complexity of its mountainous terrain. The meteorological Mesoscale Model, version 5 with Chemistry (MM5-Chem), an online-coupled atmospheric chemistry model, was used to investigate the effect of this terrain on a high air pollution event in the free troposphere. The simulations were evaluated by comparisons with data from the North American Regional Reanalysis (NARR). Complex terrain was shown to have an important influence on the vertical transport of air pollutants on the regional scale; emissions from ground level were vertically mixed as high as 5 km above sea surface level for the wintertime conditions simulated. The simulations showed that the vertical transport of emissions from the Earthʹs surface could have a more significant effect on mid and upper level chemical concentrations than chemical production. The vertical transport was caused predominately by terrain forced flow over the mountains’ ridge-line and the terrain forced flow was affected by the mountain peak height and the complexity of the terrain downwind.
Keywords
Meteorology , Air pollution , vertical transport , Regional transport , Complex terrain , Online coupled models
Journal title
Atmospheric Environment
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Atmospheric Environment
Record number
761052
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