SOS 99 Press Release
The following (linked above) is reproduced directly from the NOAA Home Page:
June 21, 1999
Air pollution and its effects take a toll on the whole country,
but especially in areas that are hot and humid. It can damage
crops and forests and affect human health and scenic visibility.
This summer, scientists from government and academia will pool
their resources in an air quality study that will provide a better
understanding of the basic chemical, meteorological, and transport
processes that cause air pollution.
The Southern Oxidants Study
(SOS)
is a cooperative effort among universities and federal, state,
and local government environmental and regulatory agencies to
investigate air pollution from mid-June to mid-July. Operating
out of Nashville, Tenn., scientists will investigate the processes
responsible for the formation of ozone pollution and fine particulate
matter (PM) that may be a factor in many health-related problems,
as well as crop and forest damage. This research will provide
critical background information to policy makers who are developing
solutions to deal more effectively with these problems. "Although
the nation has made considerable progress in managing air pollution
during the past thirty years," says North Carolina State
University's Dr. Ellis Cowling, "some of our most challenging
problems still remain."
Using planes, helicopters and
air monitoring stations located throughout the South, scientists
will collect air samples to assess the physical and chemical
characteristics of fine particulate matter and ozone. "The
combined activities of this study provide an unparalleled opportunity
to describe the production and distribution of ozone and PM throughout
the Southeast with a level of detail that has hitherto not been
possible," says James Meagher, of NOAA's
Aeronomy Laboratory in Boulder, Colo. Chief scientist for
the project, Meagher says that the improved insights and new
scientific findings that are expected will translate directly
into better management strategies for these two pollutants.
SOS is a coordinated, long-term research program focusing on
gaining a better insight to the formation, accumulation and,
therefore, effective management of pollution in the South. In
the late 1980's, scientists realized that the South had unique
air quality management problems caused by warm temperatures,
high humidity, stagnant air and natural emissions of hydrocarbons from the South's large rural
and urban forests. "Large urban heat islands, such as Nashville
or Atlanta, surrounded by lush vegetation and forests, cause
a unique air pollution mix of human-caused and natural emissions,"
said Meagher.
During 1997, the Environmental
Protection Agency introduced three regulatory plans to address
the most serious air quality problems in the nation. These include
a new National Ambient Air Quality Standard for ozone, new standards
for particulate matter, and proposals for new regional haze regulations
to protect and improve visibility in the national parks and wilderness
areas of the country. These actions are expected to result in
a significant increase in the number of areas regarded as "nonattainment"
for ozone. However, the new regulations are presently under intense
scrutiny and judicial review. This heightens the need for ozone
and PM management strategies to be based on sound science, which
is the goal for SOS.
During the study, aircraft
including NOAA's
WP-3D Orion hurricane hunter (serving as flagship), the Tennessee
Valley Authority's Bell helicopter, the Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory's Gulfstream-1 (G-1), and a DeHavilland Caribou will
be taking a series of coordinated chemical and meteorological
measurements. As air pollution is a problem that doesn't go away
when the sun sets, investigators from the Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory will use the G-1 aircraft to make measurements of
ozone and aerosols at night, and intercomparisons will be made
with the daytime flights of the other aircraft. The planes will
be used to collect air samples over a wide area of the Southeast
and Midwestern United States to assess to what degree ozone or
fine particulate pollution is a regional or a local problem.
The researchers will also use ground-based meteorological and
air quality monitoring stations throughout Nashville and Middle
Tennessee.
During the study, the NOAA P-3which has been reconfigured
by NOAA's
Aircraft Operations Center in Tampa, Fla., from a hurricane
research platform to a flying air chemistry laboratorywill
make a limited number of flights to study ozone and PM formation
in the region around Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta is a much larger city
than Nashville, with proportionally greater air pollution emissions.
A major contributor to Atlanta's ozone problem is automobile
exhaust, which plays a significant role in particulate matter
production. NOAA's P-3 aircraft will gather data, during extensive
low-altitude flight patterns (about 1500 feet above the ground)
over the major population and air traffic centers of Nashville
and Atlanta, that permits scientists to assess the similarities
and differences in the air quality of these two southern cities
and allow policy-makers to determine the appropriate response
to air quality management.
Scientists hope to maximize their findings by conducting the
experiments in both cities and to provide a regional perspective
for the atmospheric process studies. According to Meagher, "We're
expecting to develop a really good database from these experiments
that will provide the sound science needed to find solutions
to the special air pollution problems facing this region."
NOAA Research Earth System Research Laboratory Chemical Sciences Division
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