AndreaBC

Departamento de Ciencias Ambientales

Grupo de Espectroscopía y Percepción Remota

(55) 3157 8850

aburgosc@atmosfera.unam.mx


Formación académica:

  • Física por Facultad de Ciencias UNAM.
  • Dra en Ciencias de la Atmósfera (ICAyCC).
  • Posdoctorado en percepción remota por Universidad de Colonia (Alemania)

 

Líneas de investigación:

  • Capa límite atmosférica
  • Percepción remota
  • Dinámica de fluidos geofísicos
  • Interacción suelo-atmósfera

 

Docencia y cursos impartidos:

  • Meteorología sinóptica y de meseoescala.
  • Ayudante en múltiples cursos como:
    Dinámica de fluidos geofísicos
    Radiación solar y terrestre
    Termodinámica
    Dinámica de la Atmósfera.

 

A Seasonal Climatology of the Mexico City Atmospheric Boundary Layer

Boundary-Layer Meteorology | Autores: Andrea Burgos-Cuevas, David K. Adams, Jorge Luis García-Franco & Angel Ruiz-Angulo * Ciencias Atmosféricas | Abstract ower tropospheric thermal structure greatly affects atmospheric boundary-layer (ABL) stability and mixing processes with the free troposphere. In particular, in polluted urban zones, ABL stratification becomes a key variable in air quality research. This study focuses on generating a climatology (1990–2017) of the seasonal variability of ABL thermal structure in Mexico City by way of radiosonde analysis. Thermal inversion intensity and frequency are shown to be greater during winter and spring, a behaviour which coincides with greater pollutant concentrations. Higher concentrations are found during the dry season (November to May) than during the rainy months. In addition, significantly higher than normal surface pollutant concentrations are found on days with simple thermal inversion layers as well as during multilayer inversion days. Furthermore, stable layers, determined by potential temperature, are found throughout the year but more frequently during winter, whereas stable layers based on the virtual potential temperature prevail all year. In regions of complex terrain, such multiple stable layers have also been identified by previous authors. Additionally, the most unstable surface layers (in which the bulk Richardson number (RiBRiB) is small) develop during the rainy season, whereas during winter there are more levels in the vertical column with higher RiBRiB values. Although the Mexico City ABL and pollution episodes have been widely studied, this represents the first long-term investigation to consider the thermal stability of the ABL. Therefore, the present study provides a baseline for further research employing different observational techniques and high-resolution numerical models.