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High-Resolution Smoke Forecasting for the 2018 Camp Fire in California

Fotini Katopodes Chow, Katelyn A. Yu, Alexander Young, Eric James, Georg Grell, Ivan Csiszar, M. Tsidulko, Saulo R. Freitas, Gabriel Pereira, Louis Giglio, Mariel D. Friberg, Ravan Ahmadov

2021Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Smoke from the 2018 Camp Fire in Northern California blanketed a large part of the region for 2 weeks, creating poor air quality in the “unhealthy” range for millions of people. The NOAA Global System Laboratory’s HRRR-Smoke model was operating experimentally in real time during the Camp Fire. Here, output from the HRRR-Smoke model is compared to surface observations of PM 2.5 from AQS and PurpleAir sensors as well as satellite observation data. The HRRR-Smoke model at 3-km resolution successfully simulated the evolution of the plume during the initial phase of the fire (8–10 November 2018). Stereoscopic satellite plume height retrievals were used to compare with model output (for the first time, to the authors’ knowledge), showing that HRRR-Smoke is able to represent the complex 3D distribution of the smoke plume over complex terrain. On 15–16 November, HRRR-Smoke was able to capture the intensification of PM 2.5 pollution due to a high pressure system and subsidence that trapped smoke close to the surface; however, HRRR-Smoke later underpredicted PM 2.5 levels due to likely underestimates of the fire radiative power (FRP) derived from satellite observations. The intensity of the Camp Fire smoke event and the resulting pollution during the stagnation episodes make it an excellent test case for HRRR-Smoke in predicting PM 2.5 levels, which were so high from this single fire event that the usual anthropogenic pollution sources became insignificant. The HRRR-Smoke model was implemented operationally at NOAA/NCEP in December 2020, now providing essential support for smoke forecasting as the impact of U.S. wildfires continues to increase in scope and magnitude.

Topics & Concepts

SmokePlumeEnvironmental scienceMeteorologyTerrainSatelliteAir quality indexPollutionSubsidenceAtmospheric sciencesGeologyGeographyCartographyStructural basinBiologyEngineeringAerospace engineeringEcologyPaleontologyFire effects on ecosystemsAtmospheric aerosols and cloudsAtmospheric chemistry and aerosols
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