Los Angeles Wildfires 2025: Satellite-Based Emissions Monitoring and Air-Quality Impacts

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

In January 2025, multiple wildfires erupted across the Los Angeles region, fueled by prolonged dry conditions and intense Santa Ana winds. Southern California has faced increasingly frequent and severe wildfires in recent years, driven by prolonged drought, high temperatures, and the expanding wildland–urban interface. These fires have caused major loss of life, extensive property damage, mass evacuations, and severe air-quality decline in this densely populated, high-risk region. This study integrates passive and active satellite observations to characterize the spatiotemporal and vertical distribution of wildfire emissions and assesses their impact on air quality. TROPOMI (Sentinel-5P) and the recently launched TEMPO geostationary instrument provide hourly high temporal-resolution mapping of trace gases, including nitrogen dioxide (NO2), carbon monoxide (CO), formaldehyde (HCHO), and aerosols. Vertical column densities of NO2 and HCHO reached 40 and 25 Pmolec/cm2, respectively, representing more than a 250% increase compared to background climatological levels in fire-affected zones. TEMPO’s unique high-frequency observations captured strong diurnal variability and secondary photochemical production, offering unprecedented insights into plume evolution on sub-daily scales. ATLID (EarthCARE) lidar profiling identified smoke layers concentrated between 1 and 3 km altitude, with optical properties characteristic of fresh biomass burning and depolarization ratios indicating mixed particle morphology. Vertical profiling capability was critical for distinguishing transported smoke from boundary-layer pollution and assessing radiative impacts. These findings highlight the value of combined passive–active satellite measurements in capturing wildfire plumes and the need for integrated monitoring as wildfire risk grows under climate change.

Article activity feed