An overview of ISCAT 2000

The Investigation of Sulfur Chemistry in the Antarctic Troposphere (ISCAT) took place over the timer period of 15 November to 31 December in the year 2000. The study location was the Amundsen Scott Station in Antarctica. ISCAT 2000 defines the second phase of a program designed to explore tropospher...

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Main Authors: Davis, DD, Eisele, F, Chen, G, Crawford, J, Huey, G, Tanner, D, Slusher, D, Mauldin, L, Oncley, S, Lenschow, D, Semmer, S, Shetter, R, Lefer, B, Arimoto, R, Hogan, A, Grube, P, Lazzara, M, Bandy, A, Thornton, D, Berresheim, H, Bingemer, H, Hutterli, M, McConnell, J, Bales, R, Dibb, J, Buhr, M, Park, J, McMurry, P, Swanson, A, Meinardi, S, Blake, D
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7jf6d7w3
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt7jf6d7w3 2023-06-18T03:35:55+02:00 An overview of ISCAT 2000 Davis, DD Eisele, F Chen, G Crawford, J Huey, G Tanner, D Slusher, D Mauldin, L Oncley, S Lenschow, D Semmer, S Shetter, R Lefer, B Arimoto, R Hogan, A Grube, P Lazzara, M Bandy, A Thornton, D Berresheim, H Bingemer, H Hutterli, M McConnell, J Bales, R Dibb, J Buhr, M Park, J McMurry, P Swanson, A Meinardi, S Blake, D 5363 - 5373 2004-10-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7jf6d7w3 unknown eScholarship, University of California qt7jf6d7w3 https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7jf6d7w3 CC-BY Atmospheric Environment, vol 38, iss 32 Statistics Atmospheric Sciences Environmental Engineering Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences article 2004 ftcdlib 2023-06-05T18:02:33Z The Investigation of Sulfur Chemistry in the Antarctic Troposphere (ISCAT) took place over the timer period of 15 November to 31 December in the year 2000. The study location was the Amundsen Scott Station in Antarctica. ISCAT 2000 defines the second phase of a program designed to explore tropospheric chemistry in Antarctica. As in 1998, the 2000 ISCAT study revealed a strong oxidizing environment at South Pole (SP). During the 2000 investigation, however, the suite of measurements was greatly expanded. These new measurements established the recycling of reactive nitrogen as a critical component of this unique environment. This paper first presents the historical background leading up to the ISCAT 2000 observations; then it focuses on providing a summary of the year 2000 results and contrasts these with those recorded during 1998. Important developments made during the 2000 study included the recording of SP data for several species being emitted from the snowpack. These included NO, H 2O2 and CH2O. In this context, eddy-diffusion flux measurements provided the first quantitative estimates of the SP NO and NOx snow-to-atmosphere fluxes. This study also revealed that HNO 3 and HO2NO2 were major sink species for HOx and NOx radicals. And, it identified the critical factors responsible for SP NO levels exceeding those at other polar sites by nearly an order of magnitude. Finally, it reports on the levels of gas phase sulfur species and provides evidence indicating that the absence of DMS at SP is most likely due to its greatly shorten chemical lifetime in the near vicinity of the plateau. It is proposed that this is due to the influence of NO on the distribution of OH in the lower free troposphere over a region that extends well beyond the plateau itself. Details related to each of the above findings plus others can be found in the 11 accompanying Special Issue papers. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Article in Journal/Newspaper Amundsen-Scott Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica South pole South pole University of California: eScholarship Antarctic The Antarctic South Pole Amundsen-Scott ENVELOPE(0.000,0.000,-90.000,-90.000)
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Statistics
Atmospheric Sciences
Environmental Engineering
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
spellingShingle Statistics
Atmospheric Sciences
Environmental Engineering
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Davis, DD
Eisele, F
Chen, G
Crawford, J
Huey, G
Tanner, D
Slusher, D
Mauldin, L
Oncley, S
Lenschow, D
Semmer, S
Shetter, R
Lefer, B
Arimoto, R
Hogan, A
Grube, P
Lazzara, M
Bandy, A
Thornton, D
Berresheim, H
Bingemer, H
Hutterli, M
McConnell, J
Bales, R
Dibb, J
Buhr, M
Park, J
McMurry, P
Swanson, A
Meinardi, S
Blake, D
An overview of ISCAT 2000
topic_facet Statistics
Atmospheric Sciences
Environmental Engineering
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
description The Investigation of Sulfur Chemistry in the Antarctic Troposphere (ISCAT) took place over the timer period of 15 November to 31 December in the year 2000. The study location was the Amundsen Scott Station in Antarctica. ISCAT 2000 defines the second phase of a program designed to explore tropospheric chemistry in Antarctica. As in 1998, the 2000 ISCAT study revealed a strong oxidizing environment at South Pole (SP). During the 2000 investigation, however, the suite of measurements was greatly expanded. These new measurements established the recycling of reactive nitrogen as a critical component of this unique environment. This paper first presents the historical background leading up to the ISCAT 2000 observations; then it focuses on providing a summary of the year 2000 results and contrasts these with those recorded during 1998. Important developments made during the 2000 study included the recording of SP data for several species being emitted from the snowpack. These included NO, H 2O2 and CH2O. In this context, eddy-diffusion flux measurements provided the first quantitative estimates of the SP NO and NOx snow-to-atmosphere fluxes. This study also revealed that HNO 3 and HO2NO2 were major sink species for HOx and NOx radicals. And, it identified the critical factors responsible for SP NO levels exceeding those at other polar sites by nearly an order of magnitude. Finally, it reports on the levels of gas phase sulfur species and provides evidence indicating that the absence of DMS at SP is most likely due to its greatly shorten chemical lifetime in the near vicinity of the plateau. It is proposed that this is due to the influence of NO on the distribution of OH in the lower free troposphere over a region that extends well beyond the plateau itself. Details related to each of the above findings plus others can be found in the 11 accompanying Special Issue papers. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Davis, DD
Eisele, F
Chen, G
Crawford, J
Huey, G
Tanner, D
Slusher, D
Mauldin, L
Oncley, S
Lenschow, D
Semmer, S
Shetter, R
Lefer, B
Arimoto, R
Hogan, A
Grube, P
Lazzara, M
Bandy, A
Thornton, D
Berresheim, H
Bingemer, H
Hutterli, M
McConnell, J
Bales, R
Dibb, J
Buhr, M
Park, J
McMurry, P
Swanson, A
Meinardi, S
Blake, D
author_facet Davis, DD
Eisele, F
Chen, G
Crawford, J
Huey, G
Tanner, D
Slusher, D
Mauldin, L
Oncley, S
Lenschow, D
Semmer, S
Shetter, R
Lefer, B
Arimoto, R
Hogan, A
Grube, P
Lazzara, M
Bandy, A
Thornton, D
Berresheim, H
Bingemer, H
Hutterli, M
McConnell, J
Bales, R
Dibb, J
Buhr, M
Park, J
McMurry, P
Swanson, A
Meinardi, S
Blake, D
author_sort Davis, DD
title An overview of ISCAT 2000
title_short An overview of ISCAT 2000
title_full An overview of ISCAT 2000
title_fullStr An overview of ISCAT 2000
title_full_unstemmed An overview of ISCAT 2000
title_sort overview of iscat 2000
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2004
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7jf6d7w3
op_coverage 5363 - 5373
long_lat ENVELOPE(0.000,0.000,-90.000,-90.000)
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
South Pole
Amundsen-Scott
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
South Pole
Amundsen-Scott
genre Amundsen-Scott
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
South pole
South pole
genre_facet Amundsen-Scott
Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
South pole
South pole
op_source Atmospheric Environment, vol 38, iss 32
op_relation qt7jf6d7w3
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/7jf6d7w3
op_rights CC-BY
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