Due to their high chemical reactivity free radicals are the driving force for most chemical processes in the atmosphere, this is true, in particular, for OH- and NO3-radicals. Thus, knowledge of the concentration of those species in the atmosphere is a key requirement for the investigation of atmospheric chemistry. The low concentration of free radicals makes measurements particularly difficult, however. Among several techniques applied to the problem UV/visible differential absorption spectroscopy appears to be the most successful for the observation of OH and NO3. Detection limits of the order of 10(6) and 10(7) molec/cm3, respectively, have been reached, which are sufficiently low to resolve diurnal profiles of both species. The relative importance of both radicals in the NO(x) to nitric acid conversion is discussed.