| |
May 31, 2007
SATELLITES TRACK HUMAN EXPOSURE
TO
FINE PARTICLE POLLUTION
When
it
comes to air pollution, the smallest size can do the most harm. More
than a
decade ago, a pioneering study by Harvard's School of Public Health
showed that
one of the most dangerous forms of air pollution is particulate matter
10
microns (about 0.0004 inch) or less in size. Called PM 10, this tiny
airborne
debris is a product of burning fossil fuels. It can be found wherever
there are
cars, boilers and power plants. Fires and dust storms are also sources.
Exposure to PM 10 leads to increases in heart and lung disease and is a
particular threat to people who are more sensitive to particle
pollution,
including those with respiratory symptoms, as well as the very young
and the
elderly. All PM 10 is hazardous, but worst of all are the smallest
particles,
those less than 2.5 microns (about 0.0001 inch) known as PM 2.5.
Commonly found
in haze and smoke, this fine material can make its way deep into the
lungs and
even into the bloodstream.
The
Clean
Air Act charges the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) with
determining
what levels of PM 2.5 are acceptable, based on studies of its effect on
human
health. For the scientists studying these health effects and for
regulators
trying to protect the public, it's important to know just how much
exposure
people are receiving from this fine particle pollution.
The most detailed measurements of PM 2.5 exposure come from the
Environmental
Protection Agency's large network of air monitoring stations. But
ground
stations sample only a limited number of locations, and many rural and
smaller
urban areas are not covered at all. Researchers from the Harvard School
of
Public Health and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory set out to compare
the
capabilities of aerosol measurements from two instruments on NASA's
Earth-looking Terra satellite in predicting PM 2.5 exposure. (Aerosols
are tiny
particles suspended in the air). To test this idea, they tried to
calculate how
much PM 2.5 was in the air near the ground in the St. Louis,
Mo.,
area. The research complements other research and applications that
NASA has
supported.
"We want to be able to expand on the EPA monitoring network," says
Harvard University Research Fellow Yang Liu, who led the study. "The
challenge is that a satellite measures something different than the
EPA's
ground stations. A satellite looks down and sees the whole air column
from top
to bottom. Our goal is to be able to convert these observations into a
measure of
aerosol concentrations at the surface."
For their study, Liu and his colleagues used data from Terra's
Multi-angle
Imaging Spectroradiometer (MISR) and the Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer (MODIS). Each instrument brings something different
to the
table.
With nine cameras looking down at Earth from different angles, MISR
"has
enormous sensitivity to aerosols," says JPL's Ralph Kahn, who
participated
in the study. He says that MODIS has difficulty retrieving aerosol data
over
bright surfaces, such as deserts and in urban areas, home to more than
half of
the U.S.
population, whereas even in such areas, MISR can distinguish what's in
the
atmosphere from what's on the surface. Also, he explains, by looking at
particles in the atmosphere from different directions, MISR provides
information on their shape and size. "If you have a distinct cloud,
such
as from a fire or the plume from a volcano, you can also figure out its
height."
MISR views a relatively small portion of Earth at a single time, and it
produces massive amounts of highly accurate data about those portions.
MODIS,
on the other hand, images larger areas, yet sees aerosols in less
detail. It
can view the entire globe every few days and can image any individual
site
several times a week. MISR views individual sites about once a week.
"We
made two models to see how well we could predict ground-level PM 2.5
concentrations from each of the data sets and found similar results
between the
two, which was very encouraging," says Liu. The researchers published
their findings in the March 15, 2007, special MISR issue of Remote Sensing of Environment.
Liu said his team is now working to create a model that combines data
from both
instruments. "It will be difficult to do, and powerful when it works,"
he said.
Liu and his colleagues are also expanding their research to include
data from
other sensors. The two instruments "don't make daily observations of
the
same region," says Liu, "but they give a good snapshot of what's
happening. There are other instruments, on NOAA [National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration] weather satellites for example, that have
daily and
even more frequent coverage. If all goes well, this could become a new
data
source for studying the health effects of PM 2.5."
Remote-sensing data are not a replacement for the ground network's
measurements, the researchers say. "The ground stations can get
detailed
information about particle size and their chemical composition --
important for
understanding health effects but unobtainable from satellite
instruments,"
says Kahn. "But we can use the satellite data to extrapolate this
information in time and space."
"Satellite observations are a supplement," says Liu. "They can
be good indicators in places where no ground stations are present.
Also,
because they can give a global perspective, satellite data may also
provide
information on the global health burden from air pollution." Satellite
observations can also provide great insights into the transport of dust
and
pollutants from one state, region or country to another.
More
information and images:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/misrf-20070510.html
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/news/features.cfm?feature=1367
##
Contact:
Alan Buis
NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
818-354-0474
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/lookingatearth/misrf-20070510.html
Recommend this Article to a Friend
Back to: News |