Regional nitric oxide enhancements in the North Atlantic flight corridor observed and modeled during POLINAT 2 - a case study

S.3061-3064 : Ill., Lit. In situ measurements of nitrogen oxides and other trace chemicals were performed aboard the DLR Falcon in September and October 1997 during POLINAT 2 over the eastern North Atlantic in areas with predicted high impact of aircraft emissions to search for flight corridor effec...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geophysical Research Letters
Main Authors: Schlager, H., Schulte, P., Flatoy, F., Slemr, F., Velthoven, P. van, Ziereis, H., Schuhmann, U.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 1999
Subjects:
551
Online Access:https://publica.fraunhofer.de/handle/publica/195468
https://doi.org/10.1029/1999GL900349
Description
Summary:S.3061-3064 : Ill., Lit. In situ measurements of nitrogen oxides and other trace chemicals were performed aboard the DLR Falcon in September and October 1997 during POLINAT 2 over the eastern North Atlantic in areas with predicted high impact of aircraft emissions to search for flight corridor effects. During survey flights in the upper troposphere from the centre of the flight corridor to regions south of or below the major transatlantic aircraft routes, large-scale enhancements in mixing ratios of NO of about 50 to 150 pptv were observed in corridor areas compared to the NO abundance measured outside the corridor. Using simultaneous tracer measurements, back trajectory analyses for the air masses sampled, the actual distribution of the North Atlantic air traffic, and comparisons of observed and predicted NO distributions from a regional model of simulations including or excluding aircraft emissions, these enhancements were attributed mainly to aircraft NOx. 26 Nr.20