Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6338918 | Atmospheric Environment | 2014 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
This paper employs meteorological observation data from surface and high-balloon stations, China Meteorological Administration (CMA) model T639 output data, NCEP reanalysis data, PM2.5 observations and modeled HYSPLIT4 trajectory results to study the meteorological causes, including large-scale circulation and planetary boundary layer features, which led to the extended haze episode on January 6-16, 2013 in central-eastern China. It discusses the possible impact of pollutants transported from southern Hebei Province on Beijing. The study's results show that: (1) the re-adjustment of atmospheric circulation from a longitudinal to a latitudinal model provides a valuable interpretation of the large-scale circulation background to the haze episode experienced in the metropolitan regions of Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei and their surrounding regions; (2) the regional atmospheric stratification of the planetary boundary layer is stable and the mixing height is low, suppressing air turbulence in the planetary boundary layer and providing favorable meteorological conditions for the formation of haze; and (3) the southwesterly jet stream with wind speeds of 6-11Â m/s at a height of 850-950Â hPa and the below-700Â m air mass trajectory tracking established using the HYSPLIT4 model interdependently suggest a transport of pollutants from southern Hebei Province to Beijing at 850-950Â hPa.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
Hong Wang, Jiayu Xu, Meng Zhang, Yuanqin Yang, Xiaojing Shen, Yaqiang Wang, Dong Chen, Jianping Guo,