Biomass‐burning plumes and haze layers were observed during the ABLE 2A flights in July/August 1985 over the central Amazon Basin. The haze layers occurred at altitudes between 1000 and 4000 m and were usually only some 100 to 300‐m thick but extended horizontally over several 100 km. They could be traced by satellite imaging and trajectory studies to biomass burning at the southern perimeter of the Amazon Basin, with transport times estimated to be 1–2 days. These layers strongly influenced the chemical and optical characteristics of the atmosphere over the eastern Amazon Basin. The concentrations of CO, CO2, O3, and NO were significantly elevated in the plumes and haze layers relative to the regional background. The NO/CO ratio in fresh plumes was much higher than in the aged haze layers, suggesting that more than 80% of the NOx in the haze layers had been converted to nitrate and organic nitrogen species subsequent to emission. The haze aerosol was composed predominantly of organic material, NH4+, K+, NO3−, SO4=, and anionic organic species (formate, acetate, and oxalate). While the concentrations of most aerosol ions were substantially higher in the haze layers than in the regional background aerosol, the ratios between the aerosol ions in the haze layer aerosols were very similar to those in the boundary layer aerosol over the central Amazon region. Simultaneous measurements of trace gas and aerosol species in the haze layers made it possible to derive emission ratios for CO, NOx, NH3, sulfur oxides, and aerosol constituents relative to CO2. Regional and global emission estimates based on these ratios indicate that biomass burning is an important contributor in the global and regional cycles of carbon, sulfur, and nitrogen species. Similar considerations suggest that photochemical ozone production in the biomass‐burning plumes contributes significantly to the regional ozone budget.
photolysis. Because of the clean atmospheric environment and predicted low nonmethyl hydrocarbon levels in Antarctica, the dominant OH sink was found to be reaction with CO and CH4. Particulate levels of MSA were higher than could be attributed to condensation of boundary layer (BL) gas phase MSA on to the aerosol surface. Alternate mechanisms for generating MSA in the particle phase were speculated to involve either in-cloud oxidation of dimethylsulfoxide or OH oxidation of DMS in the atmospheric buffer layer above the boundary layer followed by condensation of gas phase MSA on aerosols and transport back to the B L
A major purpose of the third joint Soviet‐American Gases and Aerosols (SAGA 3) oceanographic cruise was to examine remote tropical marine O3 and photochemical cycles in detail. On leg 1, which took place between Hilo, Hawaii, and Pago‐Pago, American Samoa, in February and March 1990, shipboard measurements were made of O3, CO, CH4, nonmethane hydrocarbons (NMHC), NO, dimethyl sulfide (DMS), H2S, H2O2, organic peroxides, and total column O3. Postcruise analysis was performed for alkyl nitrates and a second set of nonmethane hydrocarbons. A latitudinal gradient in O3 was observed on SAGA 3, with O3 north of the intertropical convergence zone (ITCZ) at 15–20 parts per billion by volume (ppbv) and less than 12 ppbv south of the ITCZ but never ≤3 ppbv as observed on some previous equatorial Pacific cruises (Piotrowicz et al., 1986; Johnson et al., 1990). Total column O3 (230–250 Dobson units (DU)) measured from the Akademik Korolev was within 8% of the corresponding total ozone mapping spectrometer (TOMS) satellite observations and confirmed the equatorial Pacific as a low O3 region. In terms of number of constituents measured, SAGA 3 may be the most photochemically complete at‐sea experiment to date. A one‐dimensional photochemical model gives a self‐consistent picture of O3‐NO‐CO‐hydrocarbon interactions taking place during SAGA 3. At typical equatorial conditions, mean O3 is 10 ppbv with a 10–15% diurnal variation and maximum near sunrise. Measurements of O3, CO, CH4, NMHC, and H2O constrain model‐calculated OH to 9 × 105 cm−3 for 10 ppbv O3 at the equator. For DMS (300–400 parts per trillion by volume (pptv)) this OH abundance requires a sea‐to‐air flux of 6–8 × 109 cm−2 s−1, which is within the uncertainty range of the flux deduced from SAGA 3 measurements of DMS in seawater (Bates et al., this issue). The concentrations of alkyl nitrates on SAGA 3 (5–15 pptv total alkyl nitrates) were up to 6 times higher than expected from currently accepted kinetics, suggesting a largely continental source for these species. However, maxima in isopropyl nitrate and bromoform near the equator (Atlas et al., this issue) as well as for nitric oxide (Torres and Thompson, this issue) may signify photochemical and biological sources of these species.
The accuracy and precision of electrochemical concentration cell ozonesondes using 1.5% KI sensing solution were measured as a function of pressure altitude from 800 to 6 mbar. Measurements were made in an environmental chamber designed to monitor the instruments' response while subjecting them to ozone, pressure, and temperature profiles typical of those encountered during balloon‐borne soundings. Data from dual‐instrument balloon soundings were used to provide an independent estimate of precision. The precision was found to be 6–10% (one standard deviation) from 800 to 200 mbar, 5–6% from 200 to 10 mbar, and thereafter increasing to 16% at 6 mbar. The accuracy profile indicated a 3–5% positive error from 300 to 50 mbar. Larger positive errors were observed from 800 to 300 mbar (8–14%) and from 50 to about 15 mbar (10%). The error curve then rapidly rolled off toward negative values, reaching −17% at 6 mbar. Use of new pumping efficiency measurement techniques should improve both accuracy and precision by 2–3% at the lowest pressures but would increase the accuracy error in the 50‐ to 15‐mbar range by about the same amount.
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