Three-Dimensional Model Analysis of Tropospheric Photochemical Processes in the Arctic and Northern Mid_Latitudes

Halogen-driven ozone and nonmethane hydrocarbon losses in springtime Arctic boundary layer are investigated using a regional chemical transport model (CTM). Surface observation of O3 at Alert and Barrow and aircraft observations of O3 and hydrocarbons during the TOPSE experiment from February to May...

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Main Author: Zeng, Tao
Other Authors: Wang, Yuhang, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Black, Robert X., Curry, Judith, Huey, Greg, Russell, Armistead G
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Georgia Institute of Technology 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1853/7648
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftgeorgiatech:oai:smartech.gatech.edu:1853/7648 2023-05-15T15:03:51+02:00 Three-Dimensional Model Analysis of Tropospheric Photochemical Processes in the Arctic and Northern Mid_Latitudes Zeng, Tao Wang, Yuhang Earth and Atmospheric Sciences Black, Robert X. Curry, Judith Huey, Greg Russell, Armistead G 2005-08-24 3951702 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1853/7648 en_US eng Georgia Institute of Technology http://hdl.handle.net/1853/7648 Finite mixing model Back trajectory model Regional chemical transport model Bromine photochemistry Springtime surface ozone depletion Atmospheric chemistry Tropospheric chemistry Mathematical models Photochemistry Ozone Text Dissertation 2005 ftgeorgiatech 2023-02-13T18:45:39Z Halogen-driven ozone and nonmethane hydrocarbon losses in springtime Arctic boundary layer are investigated using a regional chemical transport model (CTM). Surface observation of O3 at Alert and Barrow and aircraft observations of O3 and hydrocarbons during the TOPSE experiment from February to May in 2000 are analyzed. We prescribe halogen radical distributions based on GOME BrO observations and calculated or observed other halogen radical to BrO ratios. GOME BrO shows an apparent anti-correlation with surface temperature over high BrO regions. At its peak, area of simulated near-surface O3 depletions (O3 LT 20ppbv) covers GT 50% of the north high latitudes. Model simulated O3 losses are in agreement with surface and aircraft O3 observations. Simulation of halogen distributions are constrained using aircraft hydrocarbon measurements. We find the currently chemical mechanism overestimate the Cl/BrO ratios. The model can reproduce the observed halogen loss of NMHCs using the empirical Cl/BrO ratios. We find that the hydrocarbon loss is not as sensitive to the prescribed boundary layer height of halogen as that of O3, therefore producing a more robust measure for evaluating satellite column measurement. Tropospheric tracer transport and chemical oxidation processes are examined on the basis of the observations at northern mid-high latitudes and over the tropical Pacific and the corresponding global 3D CTM (GEOS-CHEM) simulations. The correlation between propane and ethane/propane ratio is employed using a finite mixing model to examine the mixing in addition to the OH oxidations. At northern mid-high latitudes the model agrees with the observations before March. The model appears to overestimate the transport from lower to middle latitudes and the horizontal transport and mixing at high latitudes in May. Over the tropical Pacific the model reproduces the observed two-branch slope values reflecting an underestimate of continental convective transport at northern mid-latitudes and an overestimate of latitudinal ... Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Arctic Georgia Institute of Technology: SMARTech - Scholarly Materials and Research at Georgia Tech Arctic Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection Georgia Institute of Technology: SMARTech - Scholarly Materials and Research at Georgia Tech
op_collection_id ftgeorgiatech
language English
topic Finite mixing model
Back trajectory model
Regional chemical transport model
Bromine photochemistry
Springtime surface ozone depletion
Atmospheric chemistry
Tropospheric chemistry Mathematical models
Photochemistry
Ozone
spellingShingle Finite mixing model
Back trajectory model
Regional chemical transport model
Bromine photochemistry
Springtime surface ozone depletion
Atmospheric chemistry
Tropospheric chemistry Mathematical models
Photochemistry
Ozone
Zeng, Tao
Three-Dimensional Model Analysis of Tropospheric Photochemical Processes in the Arctic and Northern Mid_Latitudes
topic_facet Finite mixing model
Back trajectory model
Regional chemical transport model
Bromine photochemistry
Springtime surface ozone depletion
Atmospheric chemistry
Tropospheric chemistry Mathematical models
Photochemistry
Ozone
description Halogen-driven ozone and nonmethane hydrocarbon losses in springtime Arctic boundary layer are investigated using a regional chemical transport model (CTM). Surface observation of O3 at Alert and Barrow and aircraft observations of O3 and hydrocarbons during the TOPSE experiment from February to May in 2000 are analyzed. We prescribe halogen radical distributions based on GOME BrO observations and calculated or observed other halogen radical to BrO ratios. GOME BrO shows an apparent anti-correlation with surface temperature over high BrO regions. At its peak, area of simulated near-surface O3 depletions (O3 LT 20ppbv) covers GT 50% of the north high latitudes. Model simulated O3 losses are in agreement with surface and aircraft O3 observations. Simulation of halogen distributions are constrained using aircraft hydrocarbon measurements. We find the currently chemical mechanism overestimate the Cl/BrO ratios. The model can reproduce the observed halogen loss of NMHCs using the empirical Cl/BrO ratios. We find that the hydrocarbon loss is not as sensitive to the prescribed boundary layer height of halogen as that of O3, therefore producing a more robust measure for evaluating satellite column measurement. Tropospheric tracer transport and chemical oxidation processes are examined on the basis of the observations at northern mid-high latitudes and over the tropical Pacific and the corresponding global 3D CTM (GEOS-CHEM) simulations. The correlation between propane and ethane/propane ratio is employed using a finite mixing model to examine the mixing in addition to the OH oxidations. At northern mid-high latitudes the model agrees with the observations before March. The model appears to overestimate the transport from lower to middle latitudes and the horizontal transport and mixing at high latitudes in May. Over the tropical Pacific the model reproduces the observed two-branch slope values reflecting an underestimate of continental convective transport at northern mid-latitudes and an overestimate of latitudinal ...
author2 Wang, Yuhang
Earth and Atmospheric Sciences
Black, Robert X.
Curry, Judith
Huey, Greg
Russell, Armistead G
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Zeng, Tao
author_facet Zeng, Tao
author_sort Zeng, Tao
title Three-Dimensional Model Analysis of Tropospheric Photochemical Processes in the Arctic and Northern Mid_Latitudes
title_short Three-Dimensional Model Analysis of Tropospheric Photochemical Processes in the Arctic and Northern Mid_Latitudes
title_full Three-Dimensional Model Analysis of Tropospheric Photochemical Processes in the Arctic and Northern Mid_Latitudes
title_fullStr Three-Dimensional Model Analysis of Tropospheric Photochemical Processes in the Arctic and Northern Mid_Latitudes
title_full_unstemmed Three-Dimensional Model Analysis of Tropospheric Photochemical Processes in the Arctic and Northern Mid_Latitudes
title_sort three-dimensional model analysis of tropospheric photochemical processes in the arctic and northern mid_latitudes
publisher Georgia Institute of Technology
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1853/7648
geographic Arctic
Pacific
geographic_facet Arctic
Pacific
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/1853/7648
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