Full catalog/FIREXAQ_Aerosol_AircraftInSitu_N48_Data
FIREXAQ_Aerosol_AircraftInSitu_N48_Data·v1·dataset

Smoke particles measured by aircraft (FIREX-AQ Twin Otter)

FIREX-AQ NOAA-CHEM Twin Otter In Situ Aerosol Data
atmosphere NASA LARC_CLOUD Level 2 ICARTT
In plain English

What it measures. Up-close measurements of smoke particles, including their size, amount, and chemical makeup, sampled from inside wildfire plumes during the 2019 FIREX-AQ field campaign.

How it's made. Collected by a suite of instruments aboard the NOAA-CHEM Twin Otter aircraft as it flew through smoke plumes, focusing on nighttime plume chemistry over Western U.S. wildfires.

How & where you'd use it. Helps scientists understand what wildfire smoke is made of and how it changes chemically in the air, improving air-quality forecasts and health-impact studies.

What's measured

ATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › PARTICULATE MATTERATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › AEROSOL PARTICLE PROPERTIESATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › SULFATE PARTICLESATMOSPHERE › ATMOSPHERIC RADIATION › ABSORPTIONATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › NITRATE PARTICLESATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › ORGANIC PARTICLESATMOSPHERE › ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY › CARBON AND HYDROCARBON COMPOUNDSATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › CHEMICAL COMPOSITIONATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › SEA SALTATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › AEROSOL ABSORPTIONATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › AEROSOL EXTINCTIONATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › BLACK CARBONATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › AEROSOL SINGLE SCATTERING ALBEDOATMOSPHERE › AEROSOLS › AEROSOL PARTICLE PROPERTIES › AEROSOL CONCENTRATION

Coverage & cadence

  • Time span2019-07-29 → 2019-09-06
  • Measured byNOAA Twin Otter (AMS, UHSAS, PILS, CLAP)
  • Processing levelLevel 2
  • FormatsICARTT
  • StatusCOMPLETE

What you can do with it

  • Map air pollutants — NO₂, aerosols, ozone
  • Track greenhouse gases and Earth's energy budget
  • Feed weather and air-quality analysis
Official description

FIREXAQ_Aerosol_AircraftInSitu_N48_Data are in situ aerosol data collected onboard the NOAA-CHEM Twin Otter during FIREX-AQ. This product includes data collected by the UHSAS, AMS, CLAP, and PILS instruments. Data collection for this product is complete. Completed during summer 2019, FIREX-AQ utilized a combination of instrumented airplanes, satellites, and ground-based instrumentation. Detailed fire plume sampling was carried out by the NASA DC-8 aircraft, which had a comprehensive instrument payload capable of measuring over 200 trace gas species, as well as aerosol microphysical, optical, and chemical properties. The DC-8 aircraft completed 23 science flights, including 15 flights from Boise, Idaho and 8 flights from Salina, Kansas. NASA’s ER-2 completed 11 flights, partially in support of the FIREX-AQ effort. The ER-2 payload was made up of 8 satellite analog instruments and provided critical fire information, including fire temperature, fire plume heights, and vegetation/soil albedo information. NOAA provided the NOAA-CHEM Twin Otter and the NOAA-MET Twin Otter aircraft to measure chemical processing in the lofted plumes of Western wildfires. The NOAA-CHEM Twin Otter focused on nighttime plume chemistry, from which data is archived at the NASA Atmospheric Science Data Center (ASDC). The NOAA-MET Twin Otter collected measurements of air movements at fire boundaries with the goal of understanding the local weather impacts of fires and the movement patterns of fires. NOAA-MET Twin Otter data will be archived at the ASDC in the future. Additionally, a ground-based station in McCall, Idaho and several mobile laboratories provided in-situ measurements of aerosol microphysical and optical properties, aerosol chemical compositions, and trace gas species. The Fire Influence on Regional to Global Environments and Air Quality (FIREX-AQ) campaign was a NOAA/NASA interagency intensive study of North American fires to gain an understanding on the integrated impact of the fire emissions on the tropospheric chemistry and composition and to assess the satellite’s capability for detecting fires and estimating fire emissions. The overarching goal of FIREX-AQ was to provide measurements of trace gas and aerosol emissions for wildfires and prescribed fires in great detail, relate them to fuel and fire conditions at the point of emission, characterize the conditions relating to plume rise, and follow plumes downwind to understand chemical transformation and air quality impacts.

Get the data

firexaq_aerosol_aircraftinsitu_n48_data_access.py
import earthaccess
earthaccess.login(strategy="netrc")          # free Earthdata Login

results = earthaccess.search_data(
    short_name="FIREXAQ_Aerosol_AircraftInSitu_N48_Data",
    version="1",
    bounding_box=(-122.5, 37.2, -121.8, 37.9),  # your area (W,S,E,N)
    temporal=("2024-01-01", "2024-12-31"),       # your dates
)
files = earthaccess.open(results)   # stream straight from LARC_CLOUD
Browsing CMR needs no login. Downloading or streaming bytes needs a free Earthdata Login + the earthaccess package.