Assessing nitrogen dioxide in the Highveld troposphere: Pandora
insights and TROPOMI Sentinel-5P evaluation
Kai-Sikhakhane, R. F., Scholes, M. C.,
Piketh, S. J., van Geffen, J., Garland, R. M., Havenga, H. and
Scholes, R. J.: 2024,
Atmosphere 15, 1187, 31 pp.
doi: 10.3390/atmos15101187
Abstract
Nitrogen oxides, particularly NO2, are emitted through a variety of
industrial and transport processes globally. The world's continuous economic
development, including in developing countries, results in an increasing
concentration of those gases in the atmosphere. Yet, there is scant
information on the current state and recent evolution of these atmospheric
pollutants over a range of spatial and temporal scales, especially in
Africa. This, in turn, hinders the assessment of the emissions and the
evaluation of potential risks or impacts on societies and their economies,
as well as on the environment. This study attempts to fill the gap by
leveraging data from a Pandora-2S ground-based, column-integrating
instrument located in Wakkerstroom in the Mpumalanga Province of South
Africa and space-based remote sensing data obtained from the TROPOMI
instrument onboard the ESA Sentinel-5P satellite. We compare these two
spatially (horizontal) representative data sets using statistical tools to
investigate the concentrations of emitted and transported NO2 at this
particular location, expecting that a significant positive correlation
between the NO2 tropospheric vertical column (TVC) data might justify using
the TROPOMI data, available globally, as a proxy for tropospheric and
boundary layer NO2 concentrations over the Highveld of South Africa more
generally. The data from the two instruments showed no significant
difference between the interannual mean TVC-NO2 in 2020 and 2021. The
seasonal patterns for both instruments were different in 2020, but in 2021,
both measured peak TVC-NO2 concentrations in late winter (week 34). The
instruments both detected higher TVC-NO2 concentrations during transitions
between seasons, particularly from winter to spring. The TVC-NO2
concentrations measured in Wakkerstroom Mpumalanga are mostly contributed to
by the emission sources in the low troposphere, such as biomass burning and
emissions from local power stations.
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