Observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late Arctic winter 2000/01

During the Arctic winter of 2000/01, ground-based FTIR and millimetre-wave measurements revealed significant amounts of ClO over Kiruna after the final warming in February 2001. In fact, column amounts of ClO were still increased in March 2001 when temperatures were about 20K above the PSC (Polar St...

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Main Authors: Blumenstock, T., Kopp, G., Hase, F., Hochschild, G., Mikuteit, S., Raffalski, U., Ruhnke, R.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Karlsruhe 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5445/ir/110064105
https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/110064105
id ftdatacite:10.5445/ir/110064105
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdatacite:10.5445/ir/110064105 2023-05-15T14:57:52+02:00 Observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late Arctic winter 2000/01 Blumenstock, T. Kopp, G. Hase, F. Hochschild, G. Mikuteit, S. Raffalski, U. Ruhnke, R. 2006 https://dx.doi.org/10.5445/ir/110064105 https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/110064105 en eng Karlsruhe CC BY NC SA 2.5 Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Text article-journal Journal Article ScholarlyArticle 2006 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5445/ir/110064105 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z During the Arctic winter of 2000/01, ground-based FTIR and millimetre-wave measurements revealed significant amounts of ClO over Kiruna after the final warming in February 2001. In fact, column amounts of ClO were still increased in March 2001 when temperatures were about 20K above the PSC (Polar Stratospheric Clouds) threshold. At these temperatures, chlorine activation due to heterogeneous processes on PSCs is not possible even in the presence of strong lee wave effects. In order to discuss possible reasons of this feature, time series of other chemical species will be presented and discussed, too. Measurements of HF and COF2 indicated that vortex air was still observed in mid-March 2001. Since the time series of HNO3 column amounts do not give any evidence of a denitrification later than 11 February, chlorine activation persisting for several weeks after the presence of PSCs due to denitrification is rather unlikely. The photolysis of ClONO2-rich air which had been formed at the end of February and beginning of March 2001 as well as chlorine activation due to the presence of an unusual aerosol layer are discussed as possible causes of the increased ClO column amounts after the final warming. Text Arctic Kiruna DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Kiruna
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
description During the Arctic winter of 2000/01, ground-based FTIR and millimetre-wave measurements revealed significant amounts of ClO over Kiruna after the final warming in February 2001. In fact, column amounts of ClO were still increased in March 2001 when temperatures were about 20K above the PSC (Polar Stratospheric Clouds) threshold. At these temperatures, chlorine activation due to heterogeneous processes on PSCs is not possible even in the presence of strong lee wave effects. In order to discuss possible reasons of this feature, time series of other chemical species will be presented and discussed, too. Measurements of HF and COF2 indicated that vortex air was still observed in mid-March 2001. Since the time series of HNO3 column amounts do not give any evidence of a denitrification later than 11 February, chlorine activation persisting for several weeks after the presence of PSCs due to denitrification is rather unlikely. The photolysis of ClONO2-rich air which had been formed at the end of February and beginning of March 2001 as well as chlorine activation due to the presence of an unusual aerosol layer are discussed as possible causes of the increased ClO column amounts after the final warming.
format Text
author Blumenstock, T.
Kopp, G.
Hase, F.
Hochschild, G.
Mikuteit, S.
Raffalski, U.
Ruhnke, R.
spellingShingle Blumenstock, T.
Kopp, G.
Hase, F.
Hochschild, G.
Mikuteit, S.
Raffalski, U.
Ruhnke, R.
Observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late Arctic winter 2000/01
author_facet Blumenstock, T.
Kopp, G.
Hase, F.
Hochschild, G.
Mikuteit, S.
Raffalski, U.
Ruhnke, R.
author_sort Blumenstock, T.
title Observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late Arctic winter 2000/01
title_short Observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late Arctic winter 2000/01
title_full Observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late Arctic winter 2000/01
title_fullStr Observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late Arctic winter 2000/01
title_full_unstemmed Observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late Arctic winter 2000/01
title_sort observation of unusual chlorine activation by ground-based infrared and microwave spectroscopy in the late arctic winter 2000/01
publisher Karlsruhe
publishDate 2006
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5445/ir/110064105
https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/110064105
geographic Arctic
Kiruna
geographic_facet Arctic
Kiruna
genre Arctic
Kiruna
genre_facet Arctic
Kiruna
op_rights CC BY NC SA 2.5
Open Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5445/ir/110064105
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