This paper examined the variability of equatorial thermospheric meridional and zonal wind speeds at night-time using an optical Fabry–Perot interferometer (FPI) located in Abuja, Nigeria (Geographic: 8.99°N, 7.39°E; Geomagnetic latitude: -1.60). The study period covered 9 months with useable data of 139 nights between March 2016 and January 2018. The hourly zonal wind speed is between 19.33 and 250 ms-1 and that of the meridional wind ranged between 0 and 200 ms-1. These speeds are greater than those reported in other longitudinal sectors, and this could be one of the reasons responsible for reduced EXB drift in this region compared to other regions. Comparison of FPI ground-based measurements with estimates from the Horizontal Wind Model (HWM-14) accurately reproduced the meridional component, but for some departure of ~45 ms-1 in May and June 2016, and January 2018. A very good agreement is observed between the predicted and measured zonal winds speed in the months of 2017. However, the HWM-14 overestimated the zonal wind speed in the early evening values by ~30 ms-1 and underestimated the post-midnight values by a larger factor in December 2017. Hence, this necessitates a call for improvement of the HWM-14 by using newly observed data in order to better characterize the West African sector. The varying zonal winds showed modal periods of 25.9 and 133.5 days, which are quasi 27-days and quasi-terannual periodic variations, respectively. On the meridional wind, oscillatory periods of 133.5 and 23.1 days are seen in year 2016 and 2017, respectively.
The emergence of COVID-19 brought panic and a sense of urgency causing governments to impose strict restrictions on human and vehicular movement. With anthropogenic emissions, especially traffic and industrial activities, said to be a significant contributor to ambient air pollution, this study assessed the impacts of the imposed restrictions on the atmospheric concentrations and size distribution of atmospheric aerosols and gaseous pollutants over West African sub-region and seven major COVID-19 epicenters in the sub-region. Satellite retrievals and reanalysis datasets were used to study the impact of the restrictions on Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) and atmospheric concentrations NO2, SO2, CO and O3. These anomalies were computed for 2020 relative to 2017-2019 (the reference years). In 2020 relative to the reference years, there was a significant reduction of between 0.5±24.6 – 13.7±30.3% and 5.9±17.1% in area-averaged AOD levels at the epicenters and over the sub-region, respectively. The levels of NO2 and SO2 also reduced substantially at the epicenters, especially during the periods when the restrictions were highly enforced. However, the atmospheric levels of CO and ozone increased slightly in 2020 compared to the reference years. This study shows that “a one cap fits all” policy cannot reduced the level of air pollutants and that traffic and industrial processes are not the major sources of CO in major cities in the sub-region. Although not available, ground-based measurements would have given a clearer and better picture of the anomalies observed with the dataset used in this study which are on a coarser spatial resolution.