834 research outputs found
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Trace chemical measurements from the northern midlatitude lowermost stratosphere in early spring: Distributions, correlations, and fate
In situ measurements of a large number of trace chemicals from the midlatitude (37-57°N) lower stratosphere were performed with the NASA DC-8 aircraft during March 1994. Deepest penetrations into the stratosphere (550 ppb O3, 279 ppb N2O, and 350 K potential temperature) corresponded to a region that has been defined as the "lowermost stratosphere" (LS) by Holton et al [1995]. Analysis of data shows that the mixing ratios of long-lived tracer species (e. g. CH4, HNO3, NOy, CFCs) are linearly correlated with those of O3 and N2O. A ΔNOy/ΔO3 of 0.0054 ppb/ppb and ΔNOy/ΔN2O of -0.081 ppb/ppb is in good agreement with other reported measurements from the DC-8. These slopes are however, somewhat steeper than those reported from the ER-2 airborne studies. We find that the reactive nitrogen budget in the LS is largely balanced with HNO3 accounting for 80% of NOy, and PAN and NOx together accounting for 5%. A number of oxygenated species (e. g. acetone, H2O2) were present and may provide an important in situ source of HOx in the LS. SO2 mixing ratios were found to increase in the stratosphere at a rate that was comparable to the decline in OCS levels. No evidence of particle formation could be observed. Ethane, propane, and acetylene mixing ratios declined rapidly in the LS with Cl atoms likely playing a key role in this process. A number of reactive hydrocarbons/halocarbons (e. g. C6H6, CH3I) were present at low but measurable concentrations
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Latitudinal distribution of reactive nitrogen in the free troposphere over the Pacific Ocean in late winter/early spring
The late winter/early spring (February/March, 1994) measurements of Pacific Exploratory Mission-West (PEM-W) B have been analyzed to show latitudinal distributions (45°N to 10°S) of the mixing ratios of reactive nitrogen species (NO, peroxyacetylnitrate (PAN), HNO3, and NOy), ozone, and chemical tracers (CO, NMHCs, acetone, and C2Cl4) with a focus on the upper troposphere. Mixing ratios of all species are relatively low in the warm tropical and subtropical air south of the polar jetstream (≈28°N) but increase sharply with latitude in the cold polar air north of the jetstream. Noteworthy is the continuous increase in reservoir species (PAN and HNO3) and the simultaneous decrease in NOx toward the northern midlatitudes. The Harvard global three-dimensional model of tropospheric chemistry has been used to compare these observations with predictions. In the upper troposphere the magnitude and distribution of measured NOy and PAN as a function of latitude is well represented by this model, while NOx (measured NO + model calculated NO2) is underpredicted, especially in the tropics. Unlike several previous studies, where model-predicted HNO3 exceeded observations by as much as a factor of 10, the present data/model comparison is improved to within a factor of 2. The predicted upper tropospheric HNO3 is generally below or near measured values, and there is little need to invoke particle reactions as a means of removing or recycling HNO3. Comparison between measured NOy and the sum of its three main constituents (PAN + NOx + HNO3) on average show a small mean shortfall (<15%). This shortfall could be attributed to the presence of known but unmeasured species (e.g., peroxynitric acid and alkyl nitrates) as well as to instrument errors. Copyright 1998 by the American Geophysical Union
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Troposheric Reactive Odd Nitrogen Over the South Pacific in Austral Springtime
SUMMERTIME TROPOSPHERIC OBSERVATIONS RELATED TO NXOY DISTRIBUTIONS AND PARTITIONING OVER ALASKA - ARCTIC BOUNDARY-LAYER EXPEDITION 3A
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Tropospheric reactive odd nitrogen over the South Pacific in austral springtime
The distribution of reactive nitrogen species over the South Pacific during austral springtime appears to be dominated by biomass burning emissions and possibly lightning and stratospheric inputs. The absence of robust correlations of reactive nitrogen species with source-specific tracers (e.g., C2H2 [combustion], CH3Cl [biomass burning], C2Cl4 [industrial],210Pb [continental], and 7Be [stratospheric]) suggests significant aging and processing of the sampled air parcels due to losses by surface deposition, OH attack, and dilution processes. Classification of the air parcels based on CO enhancements indicates that the greatest influence was found in plumes at 3–8 km altitude in the distributions of HNO3 and peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN). Here mixing ratios of these species reached 600 parts per trillion by volume (pptv), values surprisingly large for a location several thousand kilometers removed from the nearest continental areas. The mixing ratio of total reactive nitrogen (the NOy sum), operationally defined in this paper as measured (NO + HNO3 + PAN + CH3ONO2 + C2H5ONO2) + modeled (NO2), had a median value of 285 pptv within these plumes compared with 120 pptv in nonplume air parcels. Particle NO−3 was not included in this analysis of the NOy sum due to its 10- to 15-min sampling time resolution, but, in general, it was \u3c10% of the NOy sum. Comparison of the two air parcel classifications for NOy and alkyl nitrate distributions showed no perceivable plume influence, but recycling of reactive nitrogen may have masked this direct effect. In the marine boundary layer, the NOy sum averaged 50 pptv in both air parcel classifications, being somewhat isolated from the polluted conditions above it by the trade wind inversion. In this region, however, alkyl nitrates appear to have an important marine source where they comprise 20–80% of the NOy sum in equatorial and high-latitude regions over the South Pacific
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ORIGIN OF TROPOSPHERIC NOX OVER SUB-ARCTIC EASTERN CANADA IN SUMMER
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