Title
Using Satellite Imagery to Improve the Characterization of Crop Residue Burning Emissions in the US National Emission Inventory
Document Type
Conference Paper/Presentation
Publication Date
2014
Abstract
Biomass burning contributes to the degradation of air quality because of its impact on ozone and particulate matter. One sector of the U.S. National Emission Inventory (NEI), crop residue burning, has been difficult to characterize. Previous "bottom up" efforts have resulted in omissions in some regions and unrealistic gradients of emissions across state boundaries. This work integrates daily fire locations from NOAA's Hazard Mapping System (HMS), burn scar products from NASA satellite imagery, and updated emission factors to build an improved characterization of temporally and spatially resolved emission datasets for regional air quality modeling. Comparisons with earlier estimates show significant changes in the temporal and spatial distribution of crop residue burning emissions. Results from the Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) modeling system exercised at a 12 km resolution across the continental U.S. show relatively small but appreciable changes in fine particulate (PM2.5) concentrations over parts of the modeling domain.
Publication Title
AGU Fall Meeting 2014
Recommended Citation
Pierce, T. E.,
Pouliot, G.,
Rao, V.,
McCarty, J. L.,
&
Soja, A. J.
(2014).
Using Satellite Imagery to Improve the Characterization of Crop Residue Burning Emissions in the US National Emission Inventory.
AGU Fall Meeting 2014.
Retrieved from: https://digitalcommons.mtu.edu/mtri_p/152
Publisher's Statement
© 2014 American Geophysical Union.