Smoke Plume Dispersal from the World Trade Center Disaster
09.06.06
The collapse of the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, and the
fires that followed produced a noxious smoke plume, a complex mixture of
tiny airborne particles and gases. Determining where humans may have
been exposed to these contaminants and the amount of their exposure is
very difficult. But recently, scientists from the Environmental and
Occupational Health Science Institute Robert Wood Johnson Medical School
and Rutgers University, in partnership with the Environmental Protection
Agency and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory have created a detailed
numerical model that shows the pollutant dispersion from "Ground Zero"
to the surrounding New York - New Jersey region.
Image right: Mathematical models were used to map of the path of the plume of pollution from the World Trade Center. Below, data about the plume. Image credit: NASA/GSFC/LaRC/JPL + Larger view
Air pollution in the urban atmosphere can damage human health,
biological systems, and vegetation. A team of science assessment experts
is using this new computer model to analyze the environmental and health
impacts of this extreme event.
For example, researchers are using model results in studies of the birth
weights of infants whose mothers were near the World Trade Center on
Sept. 11, 2001, when they were pregnant and of the incidence of asthma
during the first weeks after the attack. The model helps them estimate
human exposure levels based on where the plume was located, how much
material it contained, and how long it remained.
To map the path of the plume of pollution from the World Trade Center,
the researchers used mathematical models of micrometeorological
atmospheric circulation and tracer transport, surface measurements, and
space-based observations from the high-resolution Landsat imager and the
Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) on NASA's Terra satellite.
While some airborne material circulated within the urban "canyons," much
of the material was lifted above the buildings and transported great
distances. As a result, surface level exposures were not as frequent and
intense as they could have been under different meteorological
conditions. To simulate the transport of pollutants in the plume, the
researchers had to understand its behavior on scales ranging from tens
of meters to several hundred kilometers. They calculated atmospheric
motions using a multi-grid regional atmospheric modeling system covering
scales from 250 meters to 300 kilometers.
To calculate pollutant transport, they used a hybrid particle and
concentration transport model. They evaluated their model's simulated
pollutant concentrations, transport, direction, and timing, by comparing
the results with fine-scale aerosol measurements routinely acquired from
the roofs of New York City public school buildings.
The researchers calculated the evolution of the plume using a
"Lagrangian" transport model, which considers the plume to be a
collection of parcels that flow downwind. They found that for the model
results to match the observations, the peak aerosol emissions in the
World Trade Center fire must reach about 35 to 350 kg of particles per
hour - thus, the concentration of aerosols within the core of the WTC
plume was higher than the routine aerosol pollution in the world's most
polluted cities.
Since wind speed and direction can change dramatically at different
levels in the atmosphere, knowing the height of the aerosol plume was a
crucial part of ensuring that the model produced realistic results. JPL
scientists used stereo images of the region acquired by the MISR
instrument at about noon on September 12, 2001, combined with
ground-based photographs of the plume, to determine the plume height. A
natural color MISR image appears here (acquired by MISR's 70?
forward-viewing camera on September 12) along with histograms of
stereo-derived elevations at four points (P1, P2, P3, P4) progressing
from the World Trade Center source to about 70 kilometers downwind.
In addition to plume altitude and direction, MISR also provided
information about plume evolution. Researchers could trace the plume's
development by comparing the combination of airborne particles observed
near the plume's source with particles that appear downwind in this MISR
snapshot. The researchers also use MISR observations to check how well
their model estimates the amount of particulate material the plume
contained.
The scientists published their findings in the July issue of the journal
Environmental Fluid Mechanics.
Alan Buis 818-354-0474
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.