
Click on the image for movie
Beginning August 26, 2009, and continuing into September 2009, a large
wildfire in the Angeles National Forest north of Los Angeles known as the
Station Fire burned more than 140,000 acres through September 3. Carbon
monoxide in the smoke from this large fire was lofted as high as 8.3
kilometers (27,000 feet) into the atmosphere, where it was observed by
JPL's Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument onboard NASA's Aqua
satellite.
This movie, created using continuously updated data from NASA’s “Eyes on
the Earth 3-D” feature on NASA’s global climate change website
(http://climate.nasa.gov), shows three-day running averages of daily AIRS retrievals of
the abundance of carbon monoxide present at an altitude of 5.5 kilometers
(18,000 feet). AIRS is most sensitive to carbon monoxide at this altitude,
which is a region conducive to long-range transport of the smoke. As the
carbon monoxide is lifted by the fire's heat and blows downwind, it
appears in the August 30 AIRS map north and east of the fire as a yellow
to red plume that stretches from Southern California across Nevada and
Utah. The plume is transported eastward on subsequent days, crossing
Denver on August 31, southeastward to Texas on September 1, and reaching
the Louisiana Gulf Coast on September 2. As the plume moves further east,
mixing of carbon monoxide down to Earth's surface could adversely impact
air quality, as it has already done in Salt Lake City and Denver. Previous
studies using AIRS data have documented the impact of distant fires on air
quality in Houston and other locations [McMillan et al., 2008, JGR,
doi:10.1029/2007JD009711; McMillan et al., 2009, JGR, doi:10.1029/2009jd011973].
The AIRS instrument flies on NASA's Aqua satellite and is managed by the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, California, under contract to NASA.
JPL is a division of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena.
More information about AIRS can be found at http://airs.jpl.nasa.gov..