Publication | Closed Access
The Amazon Boundary Layer Experiment (ABLE 2A): dry season 1985
198
Citations
30
References
1988
Year
EngineeringChemical CompositionAble 2AAir QualityOceanographyEarth System ScienceBoundary LayerEarth ScienceVegetation-atmosphere InteractionsAtmospheric ScienceMicrometeorologyLower AtmosphereMeteorologyBiogeochemistrySoil GasAtmospheric InteractionGeographyClimatologyAtmospheric ConditionOrganic Aerosol EmissionsAtmospheric Impact AssessmentMeteorological ForcingDry Season 1985Atmospheric ProcessAir Pollution
The Amazon Boundary Layer Experiment (ABLE 2A) used data from aircraft, ground‐based, and satellite platforms to characterize the chemistry and dynamics of the lower atmosphere over the Amazon Basin during the early‐to‐middle dry season, July and August 1985. This paper reports the conceptual framework and experimental approach used in ABLE 2A and serves as an introduction to the detailed papers which follow in this issue. The results of ABLE 2A demonstrate that isoprene, methane, carbon dioxide, nitric oxide, dimethylsulfide, and organic aerosol emissions from soils and vegetation play a major role in determining the chemical composition of the atmospheric mixed layer over undisturbed forest and wetland environments. As the dry season progresses, emissions from both local and distant biomass burning become an important source of carbon monoxide, nitric oxide and ozone in the atmosphere over the central Amazon Basin.
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