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Smoke aerosols dispersion and transport from the 2013 New South Wales (Australia) bushfires
Authors:Hiep Nguyen Duc  Lisa Tzu-Chi Chang  Merched Azzi  Ningbo Jiang
Institution:1.Environment Quality, Atmospheric Science and Climate Change Research Group,Ton Duc Thang University,Ho Chi Minh,Vietnam;2.Faculty of Environment and Labour Safety,Ton Duc Thang University,Ho Chi Minh,Vietnam;3.New South Wales Office of Environment and Heritage,Sydney,Australia;4.CSIRO Energy Flagship,North Ryde,Australia
Abstract:Environmental monitoring and modelling, especially in the regional context, has seen significant progress with the widely usage of satellite measurement in conjunction with local meteorological and air quality monitoring to understand the atmospheric dispersion and transport of air pollutants. This paper studies the application of these data and modelling tools to understand the environment effects of a major bushfire period in the state of New South Wales (NSW), Australia, in 2013. The bushfires have caused high pollution episodes at many sites in the greater Sydney metropolitan areas. The potential long-range transport of aerosols produced by bushfires to other region and states has been seen by regulators as a major concern. Using data and images collected from satellites, in addition to the results obtained from different simulations carried out using HYSPLIT trajectory model and a regional meteorological model called Conformal Cubic Atmospheric Model (CCAM), we were able to identify at least 2 days on which the smoke aerosols from bush fires in NSW has been transported at high altitude to the northern state of Queensland and the Coral Sea. As a result, widespread high particle concentration in South East Queensland including the Brisbane area, as measured by nearly all the air quality monitoring stations in this region, occurred on the day when the smoke aerosols intruded to lower altitude as indicated by the CALIOP (Cloud-Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization) Lidar measurements on the CALIPSO (Cloud–Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation) satellite. The use of meteorological or air quality modelling to connect the ground-based measurements with satellite observations as shown in this study is useful to understand the pollutant transport due to bushfires and its impact on regional air quality.
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