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Mission CO2ntrol: A Statistical Scientist's Role in Remote Sensing of Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide

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posted on 2018-05-16, 20:53 authored by Noel Cressie

Too much carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere is a threat to long-term sustainability of Earth's ecosystem. Atmospheric CO2 is a leading greenhouse gas that has increased to levels not seen since the middle Pliocene (approximately 3.6 million years ago). One of the US National Aeronautics Space Administration's (NASA) remote sensing missions is the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2, whose principal science objective is to estimate the global geographic distribution of CO2 sources and sinks at Earth's surface, through time. This starts with raw radiances (Level 1), moves on to retrievals of the atmospheric state (Level 2), from which maps of gap-filled and de-noised geophysical variables and their uncertainties are made (Level 3). With the aid of a model of transport in the atmosphere, CO2 fluxes (Level 4) can be obtained from Level 2 data directly or possibly through Level 3. Decisions about how to mitigate or manage CO2 could be thought of as Level 5. Hierarchical statistical modeling is used to qualify and quantify the uncertainties at each level. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

Funding

The University of Wollongong promoted parts of this research in an advertising campaign, for which our brainstorming sessions produced “Mission CO2ntrol” (and “Climate CH4ange”). OCO-2 data were obtained from Goddard Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center, operated by NASA, from the website http://daac.gsfc.nasa.gov/. TCCON data were obtained from the TCCON Data Archive, hosted by the Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center, from the website http://tccon.ornl.gov/. This research was partially supported by a NASA ROSES grant NNH11-ZDA001N-OCO2 and by a 2015–2017 Discovery Project, number DP150104576, from the Australian Research Council.

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