Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic

The photochemical evolution of an anthropogenic plume from the New-York/Boston region during its transport at low altitudes over the North Atlantic to the European west coast has been studied using a Lagrangian framework. This plume, originally strongly polluted, was sampled by research aircraft jus...

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Main Authors: Real, E., Law, K., Schlager, H., Roiger, A., Huntrieser, H., Methven, J., Cain, M., Holloway, J., Neuman, J.A., Ryerson, T., Flocke, F., de Gouw, J., Atlas, E., Donnelly, S., Parrish, D.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elib.dlr.de/54684/
http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/volumes_and_issues.html
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author Real, E.
Law, K.
Schlager, H.
Roiger, A.
Huntrieser, H.
Methven, J.
Cain, M.
Holloway, J.
Neuman, J.A.
Ryerson, T.
Flocke, F.
de Gouw, J.
Atlas, E.
Donnelly, S.
Parrish, D.
author_facet Real, E.
Law, K.
Schlager, H.
Roiger, A.
Huntrieser, H.
Methven, J.
Cain, M.
Holloway, J.
Neuman, J.A.
Ryerson, T.
Flocke, F.
de Gouw, J.
Atlas, E.
Donnelly, S.
Parrish, D.
author_sort Real, E.
collection Unknown
description The photochemical evolution of an anthropogenic plume from the New-York/Boston region during its transport at low altitudes over the North Atlantic to the European west coast has been studied using a Lagrangian framework. This plume, originally strongly polluted, was sampled by research aircraft just off the North American east coast on 3 successive days, and 3 days downwind off the west coast of Ireland where another aircraft re-sampled a weakly polluted plume. Changes in trace gas concentrations during transport were reproduced using a photochemical trajectory model including deposition and mixing effects. Chemical and wet deposition processing dominated the evolution of all pollutants in the plume. The mean net O3 production was evaluated to be -5 ppbv/day leading to low values of O3 by the time the plume reached Europe. Wet deposition of nitric acid was responsible for an 80% reduction in this O3 production. If the plume had not encountered precipitation, it would have reached the Europe with O3 levels up to 80-90 ppbv, and CO levels between 120 and 140 ppbv. Photochemical destruction also played a more important role than mixing in the evolution of plume CO due to high levels of both O3 and water vapour showing that CO cannot always be used as a tracer for polluted air masses, especially for plumes transported at low altitudes. The results also show that, in this case, an important increase in the O3/CO slope can be attributed to chemical destruction of CO and not to photochemical O3 production as is often assumed.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
id ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:54684
institution Open Polar
language English
op_collection_id ftdlr
op_relation https://elib.dlr.de/54684/1/acp-8-7737-2008.pdf
Real, E. und Law, K. und Schlager, H. und Roiger, A. und Huntrieser, H. und Methven, J. und Cain, M. und Holloway, J. und Neuman, J.A. und Ryerson, T. und Flocke, F. und de Gouw, J. und Atlas, E. und Donnelly, S. und Parrish, D. (2008) Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 8, Seiten 7737-7754. Copernicus Publications.
publishDate 2008
publisher Copernicus Publications
record_format openpolar
spelling ftdlr:oai:elib.dlr.de:54684 2025-06-15T14:42:57+00:00 Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic Real, E. Law, K. Schlager, H. Roiger, A. Huntrieser, H. Methven, J. Cain, M. Holloway, J. Neuman, J.A. Ryerson, T. Flocke, F. de Gouw, J. Atlas, E. Donnelly, S. Parrish, D. 2008 application/pdf https://elib.dlr.de/54684/ http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/volumes_and_issues.html en eng Copernicus Publications https://elib.dlr.de/54684/1/acp-8-7737-2008.pdf Real, E. und Law, K. und Schlager, H. und Roiger, A. und Huntrieser, H. und Methven, J. und Cain, M. und Holloway, J. und Neuman, J.A. und Ryerson, T. und Flocke, F. und de Gouw, J. und Atlas, E. und Donnelly, S. und Parrish, D. (2008) Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 8, Seiten 7737-7754. Copernicus Publications. Atmosphärische Spurenstoffe Zeitschriftenbeitrag PeerReviewed 2008 ftdlr 2025-06-04T04:58:10Z The photochemical evolution of an anthropogenic plume from the New-York/Boston region during its transport at low altitudes over the North Atlantic to the European west coast has been studied using a Lagrangian framework. This plume, originally strongly polluted, was sampled by research aircraft just off the North American east coast on 3 successive days, and 3 days downwind off the west coast of Ireland where another aircraft re-sampled a weakly polluted plume. Changes in trace gas concentrations during transport were reproduced using a photochemical trajectory model including deposition and mixing effects. Chemical and wet deposition processing dominated the evolution of all pollutants in the plume. The mean net O3 production was evaluated to be -5 ppbv/day leading to low values of O3 by the time the plume reached Europe. Wet deposition of nitric acid was responsible for an 80% reduction in this O3 production. If the plume had not encountered precipitation, it would have reached the Europe with O3 levels up to 80-90 ppbv, and CO levels between 120 and 140 ppbv. Photochemical destruction also played a more important role than mixing in the evolution of plume CO due to high levels of both O3 and water vapour showing that CO cannot always be used as a tracer for polluted air masses, especially for plumes transported at low altitudes. The results also show that, in this case, an important increase in the O3/CO slope can be attributed to chemical destruction of CO and not to photochemical O3 production as is often assumed. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Unknown
spellingShingle Atmosphärische Spurenstoffe
Real, E.
Law, K.
Schlager, H.
Roiger, A.
Huntrieser, H.
Methven, J.
Cain, M.
Holloway, J.
Neuman, J.A.
Ryerson, T.
Flocke, F.
de Gouw, J.
Atlas, E.
Donnelly, S.
Parrish, D.
Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic
title Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic
title_full Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic
title_fullStr Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic
title_full_unstemmed Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic
title_short Lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the North Atlantic
title_sort lagrangian analysis of low level anthropogenic plume processing across the north atlantic
topic Atmosphärische Spurenstoffe
topic_facet Atmosphärische Spurenstoffe
url https://elib.dlr.de/54684/
http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/volumes_and_issues.html