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Observations of Near-Zero Ozone Concentrations Over the Convective Pacific: Effects on Air Chemistry
253
Citations
9
References
1996
Year
MeteorologyEnvironmental ChemistryMarine Boundary LayerEngineeringAtmospheric InteractionMarch 1993Atmospheric ScienceAir ChemistryDimethyl SulfideAir QualityNear-zero Ozone ConcentrationsAtmospheric ProcessConvective PacificOzoneAir PollutionLower AtmosphereEarth ScienceOzone Layer Depletion
A series of measurements over the equatorial Pacific in March 1993 showed that the volume mixing ratios of ozone were frequently well below 10 nanomoles per mole both in the marine boundary layer (MBL) and between 10 kilometers and the tropopause. These latter unexpected results emphasize the enormous variability of tropical tropospheric ozone and hydroxyl concentrations, which determine the oxidizing efficiency of the troposphere. They also imply a convective short circuit of marine gaseous emissions, such as dimethyl sulfide, between the MBL and the uppermost troposphere, leading, for instance, to sulfate particle formation.
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