Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Purdue's Project Vulcan led by Dr. Kevin Gurney to measure CO2 over North America using the Orbiting Carbon Observatory

[UPDATE: NASA's JPL has reported that the launch of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory failed, today, February 24, 2009]

About Project Vulcan

The Vulcan Project is a NASA/DOE funded effort under the North American Carbon Program (NACP) to quantify North American fossil fuel carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions at space and time scales much finer than has been achieved in the past. The purpose is to aid in quantification of the North American carbon budget, to support inverse estimation of carbon sources and sinks, and to support the demands posed by the launch of the Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) scheduled for February 2009. The detail and scope of the Vulcan CO2 inventory has also made it a valuable tool for policymakers, demographers, social scientists and the public at large (now on Google Earth!). Here is a narrated flyover.

The Vulcan project has achieved the quantification of the 2002 U.S. fossil fuel CO2 emissions at the scale of individual factories, powerplants, roadways and neighborhoods on an hourly basis. We have built the entire inventory on a common 10 km x 10 km grid to facilitate atmospheric modeling. In addition to improvement in space and time resolution, Vulcan is quantified at the level of fuel type, economic sub-sector, and county/state identification.

Work is underway to complete similar inventories for Canada and Mexico, to include CO and NOx emissions, quantification of all years from 1980 to the present, and incorporate biotic-based fuels (including ethanol!).

Vulcan is led by Dr. Kevin Gurney and a team of researchers at Purdue University. Key collaborators on the project include investigators at Colorado State University and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Explore the Vulcan website for the Vulcan gridded data, methodological details, publications, plots and analysis. A major new initiative, launched from the Vulcan experience is currently being built -- the Hestia Project -- in which we plan to quantify greenhouse gas emissions for the entire planet at the building scale with complete driving processes. This work is supported by Purdue's Showalter Trust and Knauf Insulation.

Here is a video of the Vulcan product transported through the Earth's atmosphere:



Link to site: http://www.purdue.edu/eas/carbon/vulcan/index.php


Project Vulcan blog, 2009-02-15

Vulcan on Google Earth is now available!

Vulcan version 1.1 is now available -- It contains: improved area pipeline, improved onroad diurnal cycle, temporal structure in residential and commercial, updated CO emission factors, nonroad and aircraft modules.

You can now donate to Vulcan!

Links are all on the left of the Vulcan web page.

KRG

No comments:

Post a Comment