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Unmanned
Aircraft to Study Southern California Smog and its Consequences
Tuesday, May 6, 2008
Technicians
prepare an autonomous unmanned aircraft for launch at
Edwards Air Force Base. The The Scripps-led California AUAV
Air Pollution Profiling Study (CAPPS) used unmanned aircraft
to make several types of meteorological measurements in the
atmosphere. Data from CAPPS helped researchers characterize
Southern California's smog and identify its many points of
origin.
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Credit:
University of California, San Diego / Scripps Institution of
Oceanography
Using sophisticated
unmanned aircraft, research scientists at Scripps Institution of
Oceanography, UC San Diego hope to assess Southern California’s
potential for climate change and better understand the sources of
air pollution.
Funded by the California Energy
Commission, the California AUAV Air Pollution Profiling Study
(CAPPS) uses autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles (AUAVs) to
gather meteorological data as the aircraft fly through clouds and
aerosol masses in Southern California skies. The flights will
take place at Edwards Air Force Base near Rosamond, Calif. The
study began its first sortie of data-gathering flights in April
2008.
Scripps Atmospheric and Climate
Sciences Professor V. Ramanathan, CAPPS’s lead scientist,
said the characteristics of Southern California climate and
meteorology — ranging from its dry weather to its tendency
to trap rather than export smog — could make it especially
prone to climate change consequences of air pollution such as
accelerated snowmelt and dimming at ground level.
“These monthly UAV
flights will provide unprecedented data for evaluating how long
range transport of pollutants including ozone, soot and other
particulates from the northwest United States, Canada, east Asia
and Mexico mix with local pollution and influence our air quality
and regional climate including the early melting of snow packs,”
said Ramanathan.
Data collection began on April
2, 2008 and will continue through January 2009, offering
researchers a chance to view seasonal variations in air
pollution.
Ramanathan’s team
revolutionized the gathering of atmospheric data in 2006 when the
researchers first successfully deployed the aircraft in the
Maldives AUAV Campaign (MAC). Miniaturized instruments on the
aircraft, which typically flew in formations of three, measured a
range of properties such as the quantity and size of the aerosols
on which cloud droplets form. The instruments also recorded
variables such as temperature, humidity and the intensity of
light that permeates clouds and masses of smog. It was the first
time such comprehensive measurements were made at a cost that was
very low relative to traditional manned flights.
The Scripps researchers have
used data from MAC and other field campaigns to observe that a
pervasive mass of air pollution in south and east Asia, commonly
referred to as the “atmospheric brown cloud,” can
disrupt rainfall patterns and cause cooling at ground level but
warming at higher altitudes. The cloud typically contains a mix
of dust, sulfates and soot and other forms of black carbon. These
aerosols are primarily the products of diesel combustion,
agricultural biomass burning, use of wood- and cow dung-burning
stoves in rural homes and the use of coal in home heating.
Ramanathan and his team linked
the brown cloud to an observed acceleration of glacial melt in
the Himalayas. Himalayan glaciers provide billions of people in
Asia with their drinking water.
In CAPPS, the Scripps team
hopes to determine how much of Southern California’s air
pollution comes from Asia, Mexico and from regions north of
California. Scientists routinely observe aerosol masses traveling
across the Pacific Ocean to the West Coast but are still trying
to understand the effects of that pollution. The imported smog is
only one of several sources of atmospheric aerosols in Southern
California, joining local auto and industrial emissions and smoke
from wildfires. Researchers have seen evidence that this air
pollution can mix with falling snow and accelerate its melt when
sunlight hits and warms the “dirty” snow in mountain
watersheds.
“Black carbon and ozone
are two major contributors to global warming, next to carbon
dioxide,” said Ramanathan. “We hope to document the
vertical profiles of black carbon and ozone and their climate
warming effects for the first time over California, and this data
will likely help California reduce its global warming
commitment.”
The California Energy
Commission’s Public Interest Energy Research (PIER) program
will employ CAPPS results in an analysis of the potential future
economic and ecological consequences of Southern California air
pollution. Scientists also hope to combine CAPPS results with
satellite data to better understand the role of aerosols at a
larger regional scale.
“As we learn more about
the air we breathe and seek solutions to reduce greenhouse gases,
this important atmospheric research will help us address the
serious challenges to California’s water resources,
ecology, and the health of our residents,” said Energy
Commissioner Arthur Rosenfeld. “With this study, California
continues to demonstrate its commitment as a national leader in
climate change research.”
The aircraft will profile
atmospheric conditions at altitudes ranging between 2,000 and
12,000 feet. Because of Federal Aviation Administration
regulations that prohibit unmanned aircraft from flying in public
airspace, the flight paths will be limited to military airspace,
which is exempted from FAA rules. The researchers hope to conduct
the flights at least once a month or as often as every two weeks.
The Scripps team also hopes to gather data on a situational basis
such as during wildfires.
Source:
University of California, San Diego

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