Airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the Arctic

Aircraft profiles of O3 concentrations over the Arctic ice pack in spring exhibit a depletion of O3 beneath the surface temperature inversion. One such profile from the NOAA WP-3D Arctic Gas and Aerosol Sampling Program (AGASP) flights in April, 1986 north of Alert, NWT (YLT, 82.5 N) is shown. The g...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sheridan, Patrick J., Peterson, Richard E., Oltmans, S. J., Schnell, Russell C.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1988
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890005211
id ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:19890005211
record_format openpolar
spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:19890005211 2023-05-15T14:41:19+02:00 Airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the Arctic Sheridan, Patrick J. Peterson, Richard E. Oltmans, S. J. Schnell, Russell C. Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available May 1, 1988 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890005211 unknown Document ID: 19890005211 Accession ID: 89N14582 http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890005211 No Copyright CASI ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION NASA, Goddard Space Flight Center, Polar Ozone Workshop. Abstracts; p 204-205 1988 ftnasantrs 2015-03-15T05:59:46Z Aircraft profiles of O3 concentrations over the Arctic ice pack in spring exhibit a depletion of O3 beneath the surface temperature inversion. One such profile from the NOAA WP-3D Arctic Gas and Aerosol Sampling Program (AGASP) flights in April, 1986 north of Alert, NWT (YLT, 82.5 N) is shown. The gradient of O3 across the temperature inversion, which is essentially a step function from tropospheric values (35 to 40 ppbv) to 0, is somewhat masked by a 1-min running mean applied to the data. Evidence is presented that O3 destruction beneath the Arctic temperature inversion is the result of a photochemical reaction between gaseous Br compounds and O3 to produce particulate Br aerosol. It is noted that in springtime, O3 at the Alert Baseline Station regularly decreases from 30 to 40 ppbv to near 0 over the period of a few hours to a day. At the same time, there is a production of particulate Br with a near 1.0 anti-correlation to O3 concentration. Surface concentrations of bromoform in the Arctic exhibit a rapid decrease following polar sunrise. AGASP aircraft measurements of filterable bromine particulates in the Arctic (March-April, 1983 and 1986) are shown. The greatest concentrations of Br aerosol (shown as enrichment factors relative to to Na in seawater, EFBR (Na)) were observed in samples collected beneath the surface temperature inversion over ice. Samples collected at the same altitude over open ocean (off Spitzbergen) labeled Marine did not exhibit similar Br enrichments. A second region of particulate Br enrichment was observed in the lower stratosphere, which regularly descends to below 500 mb (5.5 km) in the high Arctic. The NOAA WP-3D flew in the stratosphere on all AGASP flights and occasionally measured O3 concentrations in excess of 300 ppbv. Other/Unknown Material Arctic Spitzbergen NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
spellingShingle ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
Sheridan, Patrick J.
Peterson, Richard E.
Oltmans, S. J.
Schnell, Russell C.
Airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the Arctic
topic_facet ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
description Aircraft profiles of O3 concentrations over the Arctic ice pack in spring exhibit a depletion of O3 beneath the surface temperature inversion. One such profile from the NOAA WP-3D Arctic Gas and Aerosol Sampling Program (AGASP) flights in April, 1986 north of Alert, NWT (YLT, 82.5 N) is shown. The gradient of O3 across the temperature inversion, which is essentially a step function from tropospheric values (35 to 40 ppbv) to 0, is somewhat masked by a 1-min running mean applied to the data. Evidence is presented that O3 destruction beneath the Arctic temperature inversion is the result of a photochemical reaction between gaseous Br compounds and O3 to produce particulate Br aerosol. It is noted that in springtime, O3 at the Alert Baseline Station regularly decreases from 30 to 40 ppbv to near 0 over the period of a few hours to a day. At the same time, there is a production of particulate Br with a near 1.0 anti-correlation to O3 concentration. Surface concentrations of bromoform in the Arctic exhibit a rapid decrease following polar sunrise. AGASP aircraft measurements of filterable bromine particulates in the Arctic (March-April, 1983 and 1986) are shown. The greatest concentrations of Br aerosol (shown as enrichment factors relative to to Na in seawater, EFBR (Na)) were observed in samples collected beneath the surface temperature inversion over ice. Samples collected at the same altitude over open ocean (off Spitzbergen) labeled Marine did not exhibit similar Br enrichments. A second region of particulate Br enrichment was observed in the lower stratosphere, which regularly descends to below 500 mb (5.5 km) in the high Arctic. The NOAA WP-3D flew in the stratosphere on all AGASP flights and occasionally measured O3 concentrations in excess of 300 ppbv.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Sheridan, Patrick J.
Peterson, Richard E.
Oltmans, S. J.
Schnell, Russell C.
author_facet Sheridan, Patrick J.
Peterson, Richard E.
Oltmans, S. J.
Schnell, Russell C.
author_sort Sheridan, Patrick J.
title Airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the Arctic
title_short Airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the Arctic
title_full Airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the Arctic
title_fullStr Airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the Arctic
title_full_unstemmed Airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the Arctic
title_sort airborne measurements of tropospheric ozone destruction and particulate bromide formation in the arctic
publishDate 1988
url http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890005211
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Spitzbergen
genre_facet Arctic
Spitzbergen
op_source CASI
op_relation Document ID: 19890005211
Accession ID: 89N14582
http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19890005211
op_rights No Copyright
_version_ 1766313113603276800