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Intercontinental transport of ozone and its precursors in a three-dimensional global CTM

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Intercontinental transport of ozone and its precursors in a three-dimensional global CTM. / Wild, Oliver; Akimoto, Hajime.
In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, Vol. 106, No. D21, 16.11.2001, p. 27729-27744.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Wild, O & Akimoto, H 2001, 'Intercontinental transport of ozone and its precursors in a three-dimensional global CTM', Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, vol. 106, no. D21, pp. 27729-27744. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JD000123

APA

Wild, O., & Akimoto, H. (2001). Intercontinental transport of ozone and its precursors in a three-dimensional global CTM. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres, 106(D21), 27729-27744. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000JD000123

Vancouver

Wild O, Akimoto H. Intercontinental transport of ozone and its precursors in a three-dimensional global CTM. Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 2001 Nov 16;106(D21):27729-27744. doi: 10.1029/2000JD000123

Author

Wild, Oliver ; Akimoto, Hajime. / Intercontinental transport of ozone and its precursors in a three-dimensional global CTM. In: Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres. 2001 ; Vol. 106, No. D21. pp. 27729-27744.

Bibtex

@article{b83b23c1abd845668128bec858d1b6d8,
title = "Intercontinental transport of ozone and its precursors in a three-dimensional global CTM",
abstract = "The coupling of chemistry with atmospheric transport processes provides a mechanism for local and regional pollution from heavily populated continental regions to influence tropospheric composition at hemispheric and global scales. In this study we use the FRSGC/UCI 3-D chemical transport model to quantify the impact of ozone precursors from anthropogenic sources in the United States, Europe and East Asia on regional and global ozone budgets and to identify the key controlling processes. We find that the East Asian region has the greatest potential to affect tropospheric ozone due principally to efficient vertical transport, but that Europe experiences the greatest intercontinental effects due to rapid, short-distance transport from North America. In addition to significant boundary layer ozone production in each region, we find that 25-40% of the total net regional production occurs above 730 hPa in the free troposphere, and that on a hemispheric scale 70-85% of ozone from anthropogenic sources in the upper troposphere, above 400 hPa, is due to in-situ chemistry rather than direct vertical transport. Increased surface ozone concentrations over remote continents are largest in spring and autumn at northern mid-latitudes; while this seasonality is driven by horizontal transport in the free troposphere followed by subsidence, boundary layer and upper tropospheric chemical production make a substantial contribution. Although the effects are greatest in periodic episodes when meteorological conditions are favourable, there is significant enhancement in background ozone concentrations. We suggest that increasing emissions will significantly impact the oxidizing capacity of the troposphere by leading to greater polarization between ozone production and destruction environments.",
keywords = "Atmospheric composition, troposphere, long-range transport, ozone, chemical modelling, pollution, oxidants",
author = "Oliver Wild and Hajime Akimoto",
note = "Copyright (2001) American Geophysical Union.",
year = "2001",
month = nov,
day = "16",
doi = "10.1029/2000JD000123",
language = "English",
volume = "106",
pages = "27729--27744",
journal = "Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres",
issn = "0747-7309",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd",
number = "D21",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Intercontinental transport of ozone and its precursors in a three-dimensional global CTM

AU - Wild, Oliver

AU - Akimoto, Hajime

N1 - Copyright (2001) American Geophysical Union.

PY - 2001/11/16

Y1 - 2001/11/16

N2 - The coupling of chemistry with atmospheric transport processes provides a mechanism for local and regional pollution from heavily populated continental regions to influence tropospheric composition at hemispheric and global scales. In this study we use the FRSGC/UCI 3-D chemical transport model to quantify the impact of ozone precursors from anthropogenic sources in the United States, Europe and East Asia on regional and global ozone budgets and to identify the key controlling processes. We find that the East Asian region has the greatest potential to affect tropospheric ozone due principally to efficient vertical transport, but that Europe experiences the greatest intercontinental effects due to rapid, short-distance transport from North America. In addition to significant boundary layer ozone production in each region, we find that 25-40% of the total net regional production occurs above 730 hPa in the free troposphere, and that on a hemispheric scale 70-85% of ozone from anthropogenic sources in the upper troposphere, above 400 hPa, is due to in-situ chemistry rather than direct vertical transport. Increased surface ozone concentrations over remote continents are largest in spring and autumn at northern mid-latitudes; while this seasonality is driven by horizontal transport in the free troposphere followed by subsidence, boundary layer and upper tropospheric chemical production make a substantial contribution. Although the effects are greatest in periodic episodes when meteorological conditions are favourable, there is significant enhancement in background ozone concentrations. We suggest that increasing emissions will significantly impact the oxidizing capacity of the troposphere by leading to greater polarization between ozone production and destruction environments.

AB - The coupling of chemistry with atmospheric transport processes provides a mechanism for local and regional pollution from heavily populated continental regions to influence tropospheric composition at hemispheric and global scales. In this study we use the FRSGC/UCI 3-D chemical transport model to quantify the impact of ozone precursors from anthropogenic sources in the United States, Europe and East Asia on regional and global ozone budgets and to identify the key controlling processes. We find that the East Asian region has the greatest potential to affect tropospheric ozone due principally to efficient vertical transport, but that Europe experiences the greatest intercontinental effects due to rapid, short-distance transport from North America. In addition to significant boundary layer ozone production in each region, we find that 25-40% of the total net regional production occurs above 730 hPa in the free troposphere, and that on a hemispheric scale 70-85% of ozone from anthropogenic sources in the upper troposphere, above 400 hPa, is due to in-situ chemistry rather than direct vertical transport. Increased surface ozone concentrations over remote continents are largest in spring and autumn at northern mid-latitudes; while this seasonality is driven by horizontal transport in the free troposphere followed by subsidence, boundary layer and upper tropospheric chemical production make a substantial contribution. Although the effects are greatest in periodic episodes when meteorological conditions are favourable, there is significant enhancement in background ozone concentrations. We suggest that increasing emissions will significantly impact the oxidizing capacity of the troposphere by leading to greater polarization between ozone production and destruction environments.

KW - Atmospheric composition

KW - troposphere

KW - long-range transport

KW - ozone

KW - chemical modelling

KW - pollution

KW - oxidants

U2 - 10.1029/2000JD000123

DO - 10.1029/2000JD000123

M3 - Journal article

VL - 106

SP - 27729

EP - 27744

JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres

SN - 0747-7309

IS - D21

ER -