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[1] We use observations from two aircraft during the ICARTT campaign over the eastern United States and North Atlantic during summer 2004, interpreted with a global 3-D model of tropospheric chemistry (GEOS-Chem) to test current understanding of regional sources, chemical evolution, and export of NO...

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Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.68.4634
http://www-as.harvard.edu/chemistry/trop/publications/hudman2007.pdf
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spelling ftciteseerx:oai:CiteSeerX.psu:10.1.1.68.4634 2023-05-15T17:33:23+02:00 Click Here for Full Article The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives application/pdf http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.68.4634 http://www-as.harvard.edu/chemistry/trop/publications/hudman2007.pdf en eng http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.68.4634 http://www-as.harvard.edu/chemistry/trop/publications/hudman2007.pdf Metadata may be used without restrictions as long as the oai identifier remains attached to it. http://www-as.harvard.edu/chemistry/trop/publications/hudman2007.pdf text ftciteseerx 2016-01-08T17:49:23Z [1] We use observations from two aircraft during the ICARTT campaign over the eastern United States and North Atlantic during summer 2004, interpreted with a global 3-D model of tropospheric chemistry (GEOS-Chem) to test current understanding of regional sources, chemical evolution, and export of NOx. The boundary layer NOx data provide top-down verification of a 50 % decrease in power plant and industry NO x emissions over the eastern United States between 1999 and 2004. Observed NOx concentrations at 8–12 km altitude were 0.55 ± 0.36 ppbv, much larger than in previous U.S. aircraft campaigns (ELCHEM, SUCCESS, SONEX) though consistent with data from the NOXAR program aboard commercial aircraft. We show that regional lightning is the dominant source of this upper tropospheric NO x and increases upper tropospheric ozone by 10 ppbv. Simulating ICARTT upper tropospheric NOx observations with GEOS-Chem requires a factor of 4 increase in modeled NO x yield per flash (to 500 mol/ flash). Observed OH concentrations were a factor of 2 lower than can be explained from current photochemical models, for reasons that are unclear. A NOy-CO correlation analysis of the fraction f of North American NOx emissions vented to the free troposphere Text North Atlantic Unknown
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description [1] We use observations from two aircraft during the ICARTT campaign over the eastern United States and North Atlantic during summer 2004, interpreted with a global 3-D model of tropospheric chemistry (GEOS-Chem) to test current understanding of regional sources, chemical evolution, and export of NOx. The boundary layer NOx data provide top-down verification of a 50 % decrease in power plant and industry NO x emissions over the eastern United States between 1999 and 2004. Observed NOx concentrations at 8–12 km altitude were 0.55 ± 0.36 ppbv, much larger than in previous U.S. aircraft campaigns (ELCHEM, SUCCESS, SONEX) though consistent with data from the NOXAR program aboard commercial aircraft. We show that regional lightning is the dominant source of this upper tropospheric NO x and increases upper tropospheric ozone by 10 ppbv. Simulating ICARTT upper tropospheric NOx observations with GEOS-Chem requires a factor of 4 increase in modeled NO x yield per flash (to 500 mol/ flash). Observed OH concentrations were a factor of 2 lower than can be explained from current photochemical models, for reasons that are unclear. A NOy-CO correlation analysis of the fraction f of North American NOx emissions vented to the free troposphere
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url http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.68.4634
http://www-as.harvard.edu/chemistry/trop/publications/hudman2007.pdf
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http://www-as.harvard.edu/chemistry/trop/publications/hudman2007.pdf
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