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How Cities Breathe: Ground-Referenced, Airborne Hyperspectral Imaging Precursor Measurements To Space-Based MonitoringMethane's (CH4) large global warming potential (Shindell et al., 2012) and likely increasing future emissions due to global warming feedbacks emphasize its importance to anthropogenic greenhouse warming (IPCC, 2007). Furthermore, CH4 regulation has far greater near-term climate change mitigation potential versus carbon dioxide CO2, the other major anthropogenic Greenhouse Gas (GHG) (Shindell et al., 2009). Uncertainties in CH4 budgets arise from the poor state of knowledge of CH4 sources - in part from a lack of sufficiently accurate assessments of the temporal and spatial emissions and controlling factors of highly variable anthropogenic and natural CH4 surface fluxes (IPCC, 2007) and the lack of global-scale (satellite) data at sufficiently high spatial resolution to resolve sources. Many important methane (and other trace gases) sources arise from urban and mega-urban landscapes where anthropogenic activities are centered - most of humanity lives in urban areas. Studying these complex landscape tapestries is challenged by a wide and varied range of activities at small spatial scale, and difficulty in obtaining up-to-date landuse data in the developed world - a key desire of policy makers towards development of effective regulations. In the developing world, challenges are multiplied with additional political access challenges. As high spatial resolution satellite and airborne data has become available, activity mapping applications have blossomed - i.e., Google maps; however, tap a minute fraction of remote sensing capabilities due to limited (three band) spectral information. Next generation approaches that incorporate high spatial resolution hyperspectral and ultraspectral data will allow detangling of the highly heterogeneous usage megacity patterns by providing diagnostic identification of chemical composition from solids (refs) to gases (refs). To properly enable these next generation technologies for megacity include atmospheric radiative transfer modeling the complex and often aerosol laden, humid, urban microclimates, atmospheric transport and profile monitoring, spatial resolution, temporal cycles (diurnal and seasonal which involve interactions with the surrounding environment diurnal and seasonal cycles) and representative measurement approaches given traffic realities. Promising approaches incorporate contemporaneous airborne remote sensing and in situ measurements, nocturnal surface surveys, with ground station measurement
Document ID
20140005796
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
Leifer, Ira
(Bubbleology Research International, Inc. Goleta, CA, United States)
Tratt, David
(Aerospace Corp. El Segundo, CA, United States)
Quattrochi, Dale
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Bovensmann, Heinrich
(Bremen Univ. Germany)
Gerilowski, Konstantin
(Bremen Univ. Germany)
Buchwitz, Michael
(Bremen Univ. Germany)
Burrows, John
(Bremen Univ. Germany)
Date Acquired
May 15, 2014
Publication Date
October 15, 2013
Subject Category
Environment Pollution
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
M13-3047
Report Number: M13-3047
Meeting Information
Meeting: Hyperspectrai Infrared Imager (HyspIRl) Science and Applications Workshop
Location: Pasadena, CA
Country: United States
Start Date: October 15, 2013
End Date: October 17, 2013
Sponsors: California Inst. of Tech.
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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