California’s nitrogen dioxide (NO₂) air pollution has been reduced by a combination of the state’s COVID-19 lockdown and naturally occurring effects, according to an atmospheric scientist at The University of Alabama in Huntsville (UAH).

Dr. Aaron Naeger, a research scientist in UAH’s Earth Systems Science Center, mapped the state’s NO₂ emissions through NASA’s Short-term Prediction Research and Transition Center (SPoRT), where he is a lead aerosol and air-quality scientist. SPoRT is housed at UAH’s National Space Science Technology Center in Cramer Research Hall.

"I tracked NO₂ concentrations from satellite observations since NO₂ is a tracker for human activities related to transportation and industrial sectors," Dr. Naeger says. "California was a prime area of conducting this study due to the active transportation sector in the densely populated state."

The research involved analyzing spatial patterns in weekday NO₂ concentrations in March during the period when lockdown measures in response to the COVID-19 outbreak were being adopted in the state. Dr. Naeger blogged about the research on The Wide World of SPoRT website.

Continue reading at University of Alabama in Huntsville

Image via University of Alabama in Huntsville