Hydrocarbon and halocarbon measurements as photochemical and dynamical indicators of atmospheric hydroxyl, atomic chlorine, and vertical mixing obtained during Lagrangian flights
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作者:
Wingenter, OW
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机构:Department of Chemistry, University of California
Wingenter, OW
Kubo, MK
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机构:Department of Chemistry, University of California
Kubo, MK
Blake, NJ
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机构:Department of Chemistry, University of California
Blake, NJ
Smith, TW
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机构:Department of Chemistry, University of California
Smith, TW
Blake, DR
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机构:Department of Chemistry, University of California
Blake, DR
Rowland, FS
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机构:Department of Chemistry, University of California
Rowland, FS
机构:
[1] Department of Chemistry, University of California
[2] Department of Chemistry, School of Science, University of Tokyo, Hongo, Bukyo
[3] National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO
[4] Department of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine
[5] Department of Chemistry, School of Science, University of Tokyo, Bukyo 113
[6] National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO 80307-3000
Nonmethane hydrocarbons and halocarbons were measured during two Lagrangian experiments conducted in the lower troposphere of the North Atlantic as part of the June 1992, Atlantic Stratosphere Transition Experiment/Marine Aerosol and Gas Exchange (ASTEX/MAGE) expedition. The first experiment was performed in very clean marine air. Meteorological observations indicate that the height of the marine boundary layer rose rapidly, entraining free tropospheric air. However, the free tropospheric and marine boundary layer halocarbon concentrations were too similar to allow this entrainment to be quantified by these measurements. The second Lagrangian experiment took place along the concentration gradient of an aged continental air mass advecting from Europe. The trace gas measurements confirm that the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) Electra aircraft successfully intercepted the same air mass on consecutive days. Two layers, a surface layer and a mixed layer with chemically distinct compositions, were present within the marine boundary layer. The composition of the free troposphere was very different from that of the mixed layer, making entrainment from the free troposphere evident. Concentrations of the nonmethane hydrocarbons in the Lagrangian surface layer were observed to become depleted relative to the longer-lived tetrachloroethene. A best fit to the observations was calculated using various combinations of the three parameters, loss by reaction with hydroxyl, loss by reaction with chlorine, and/or dilution from the mixed layer. These calculations provided estimated average concentrations in the surface layer for a 5-hour period from dawn to 11 UT of 0.3+/-0.5 x10(6) molecules cm(-3) for HO, and 3.3+/-1.1 x10(4) molecules cm(-3) for Cl. Noontime concentration estimates were 2.6+/-0.7 x10(6) molecules cm(-3) for HO and 6.5+/-1.4 x10(4) molecules cm(-3) for Cl.