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Extreme enrichment in atmospheric <sup>15</sup> N <sup>15</sup> N

42

Citations

68

References

2017

Year

Abstract

Molecular nitrogen (N<sub>2</sub>) comprises three-quarters of Earth's atmosphere and significant portions of other planetary atmospheres. We report a 19 per mil (‰) excess of <sup>15</sup>N<sup>15</sup>N in air relative to a random distribution of nitrogen isotopes, an enrichment that is 10 times larger than what isotopic equilibration in the atmosphere allows. Biological experiments show that the main sources and sinks of N<sub>2</sub> yield much smaller proportions of <sup>15</sup>N<sup>15</sup>N in N<sub>2</sub>. Electrical discharge experiments, however, establish <sup>15</sup>N<sup>15</sup>N excesses of up to +23‰. We argue that <sup>15</sup>N<sup>15</sup>N accumulates in the atmosphere because of gas-phase chemistry in the thermosphere (>100 km altitude) on time scales comparable to those of biological cycling. The atmospheric <sup>15</sup>N<sup>15</sup>N excess therefore reflects a planetary-scale balance of biogeochemical and atmospheric nitrogen chemistry, one that may also exist on other planets.

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