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Mission acronym, title and status
EMeRGe
"Effect of Megacities on the Transport and Transformation of Pollutants on the Regional to Global Scales"
Mission status: 1st phase of the campaign ongoing now.
HALO deployment base
First campaign phase (EMeRGe-EU) in 2017:
Second campaign phase (EMeRGe-Asia) planned for 2018:
Time period
First campaign phase (EMeRGe-EU):
- May 22 - Aug 4, 2017 (weeks 21-31)
Second campaign phase (EMeRGe-Asia):
- Possibly March/April 2018 (weeks 9-18)
Project description
The number and size of Major Population Centers (MPC) is increasing worldwide and the impact
of their emissions on the local, regional and hemispheric atmospheric composition is inadequately
understood. In the past two decades, the growing importance of emissions from MPC for air
pollution and climate change has been recognized. A series of European (e.g., MEGAPOLI,
CITYZEN, ICARTT, etc.), American (e.g., EAST ASIA, MILAGRO, INTEX, ADAPTE, etc)
and Asian (e.g., IMPACT, PRIDE, CAREBeijing etc.) projects have attempted the first quantification
of the emissions from targeted MPC, and study their transport and transformation.
Asia is of particular importance, because of its rapid industrialization and economic growth over
the past 40 years. Our current understanding and the key scientific issues have recently been
summarized in the Global Atmosphere Watch (GAW) report number 205: Impacts of Megacities
on Air Pollution and Climate.
The impact of MPCs is not only dependent on the amount and type of emissions but also
on the regional geography, meteorology, atmospheric photochemistry and chemistry. The dependence
on these essential parameters results in large uncertainties when extrapolating locally quantified
sources for example that determined in a particular megacity, to regional and global
impacts on chemical composition and atmospheric pollution. Further vertical mixing, deposition
processes and synergetic effects of the emissions in areas having clusters of megacities lead to
unexpected non-linear effects at local and regional levels. In order to reduce the uncertainties
and improve predictive capability, measurement campaigns, and theoretical studies, which
focus on the long range transport of plumes from MPC in different regions of the world, are
required. These need to be complementary to the long term data from ground–based and satellite
borne instrumentation. Such activities may further serve to investigate, test and validate
existing hypotheses, which explain the transport and transformation pathways, the dispersion
and distribution of pollutants from megacities/ large conurbations, and their impact on regional,
hemispheric and global air pollution. The latter is a prerequisite for improving current assessments
of atmospheric pollution and climate change and the improvement of the accuracy of the
prediction of future changes.
EMeRGe aims to investigate experimentally the patterns of atmospheric transport and transformation
of pollution plumes originating from Eurasia and both tropical and subtropical Asian
megacities and MPCs. To meet this objective airborne measurements of key reactive gases
and aerosols in optimized flight patterns exploiting the capabilities of the HALO aircraft are
proposed. Utilising its long-range altitude endurance and its potential to carry large payloads,
the HALO provides a unique possibility to undertake both transects and Lagrangian experiments
of the outflow from the target regions, given the necessary flight permissions. These
measurements provide novel information on the source strengths, atmospheric transport, and
transformation of pollution plumes of varying chemical composition emitted by different large
urban agglomerates having different emission characteristics. The investigation of the vertical
and horizontal chemical evolution of the outflow will provide essential information required to
improve our understanding and to quantify the impacts of megacities on regional and global
effects of their air pollution. The information content of the HALO EMeRGe campaign data
will be enhanced synergistically by combining the EMeRGe measurements with satellite data
products from the measurements of the instrumentation on EUMETSAT Metop A and B platforms
and the Sentinel 5 Precursor. Interpretation will use state-of-the-art chemical transport
models. As a spin off, EMerGe also yields validation of some key satellite data products, which
is an original goal of HALO. The participation of state-of-the-art atmospheric modeling groups
in the analysis of data will optimize and maximize the scientific outcomes. EMeRGe builds
on and benefits from the results obtained during the OMO HALO mission in 2015, which will
provide important new information about long range transport of pollutants in pre-monsoon
and monsoon conditions over South Asia.
EMeRGe will focus on following scientific key issues, highlighted by the GAW report:
- The photochemical O3 formation and the oxidizing capacity of the MPC plumes on a
regional scale. This will be achieved by making measurements of O3, its precursors, peroxy
radicals (RO2*) as well as the nitrogen oxides (NOx, NOy), CO, VOCs, UV radiation and
the relevant photolysis frequencies upwind and downwind of selected megacities.
- The vertical transport of O3 and its precursors to assess transport pattern differences
between European and Asian megacities by measuring vertical concentration profiles of
some key species downwind of the MPC. The dynamical and temporal evolution of air
plumes from megacities by using tracers that can subsequently be detected over a period
of several days. (Tagging plumes greatly facilitates the investigation of plume transport
as well as of photochemical and microphysical transformation processes).
- The long range transport of air pollution from megacities by measuring horizontal and
vertical distribution of long lived greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide, CO2, methane
CH4, and nitrous oxide, N2O.
- The evolution of radiative properties of emissions of megacities by comparative measurement
of aerosol particle properties and composition upwind and downwind of selected
megacities.
The EMeRGe mission is proposed and led by the Institute of Environmental Physics of the
University of Bremen but is a community–based partnership including the University research
teams and those from the large research facilities. HALO will be equipped with a comprehensive
suite of instruments to provide the chemical, physical, and optical measurements required to
achieve the scientific goals described above. These will include measurements of optical and
meteorological parameters, long-lived greenhouse gases, O3 and its precursors, aerosols and their
precursors and chemical tracers of sources and transport of pollutants. EMeRGe has selected
in the first instance to study Eurasian and SE Asian megacities and MPCs having different
atmospheric dispersion conditions to assess the commonality, identify the differences in the
outflow transport and transformation patterns and determine their critical physical and chemical
pathways. Atmospheric composition, dispersion, and chemical processing within the plumes
from major population centers will be characterized, analyzed, and assessed. The optimized
research flights and patterns have been selected for periods, where active photochemistry is
mainly driven by insolation and the reduced precipitation favors mixing, transport and chemical
transformation. During two intensive measurement periods in July 2017 (three weeks) and
March 2018 (four weeks), the HALO EMeRGe measurements will be performed under both
non-precipitating and precipitating conditions. This approach delivers an optimal and distinct
observation of the regional impacts along dominant atmospheric transport pathways coming
from European and Asian MPCs.
Principal investigators
Principal investigators:
Partners
- Universität Bremen, Institut für Umweltphysik
- Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR), Institut für Physik der Atmosphäre, Oberpfaffenhofen
- Max-Planck-Institut für Chemie, Mainz
- Universität Mainz
- Universität Heidelberg
- Universität Wuppertal
- Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
- Forschungszentrum Jülich (FZJ)
- Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR), Flugexperimente, Oberpfaffenhofen
Scientific instruments and payload configuration
List of scientific instruments for the mission
Scientific instrument acronym |
Description |
Principal investigator |
Institution |
Remarks |
.. |
.. |
.. |
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BAHAMAS |
HALO basic data acquisition system |
Andreas Giez |
DLR Flugexperimente |
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Cabin and exterior configuration of HALO for the mission
HALO flights for this mission
No flights yet.
Scientific background and links to more information:
Press releases, media etc.

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Contact point at FX for this mission
HALO Project Management: Katrin Witte
Postal address:
DLR Oberpfaffenhofen
Flugexperimente (FX)
Münchener Str. 20
82234 Weßling
Germany
Office phone:
+49 (0)8153 28-1357
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