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NCAR News Release
Is North America's Ozone Homegrown or Imported?
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BOULDER--Scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research
(NCAR) and colleagues at universities and NASA have clarified the
process by which ozone--an essential shield in the stratosphere, but
a pollutant at lower levels--reaches its peak abundance across North
America each spring. The new findings come from a comprehensive study
that links computer models with airborne measurements of gases,
particles, and ultraviolet radiation.
A set of papers outlining results from the Tropospheric Ozone
Production about the Spring Equinox (TOPSE) experiment appears in the
February 28 issue of the Journal of Geophysical Research-Atmospheres
(JGR). The principal investigators are NCAR scientists Elliot Atlas,
Christopher Cantrell, and Brian Ridley.
In addition to its important role in chemical reactions that
determine the "cleansing capacity" of the atmosphere, tropospheric
ozone "is known to have detrimental effects on human health and
agricultural crop production," note the authors. Recent evidence
also
In the lower to middle troposphere, about one to five miles above the
United States and Canada, ozone levels peak as springtime arrives.
"Understanding the sources of this ozone and the processes that
produce and destroy it will help us determine how human-produced
emissions affect air quality on a global scale," says Atlas. It's
been unclear whether the ozone peak develops due to seasonal
intrusions of ozone-rich air from the stratosphere above or whether
it forms in place through photochemical effects of the intensifying
spring sun. The answer, the TOPSE team found, is a little of both,
though photochemical effects dominate in the winter-to-spring ozone
increase.
From February to May 2000, scientists from NCAR and other
institutions took to the skies above North America for the TOPSE
field campaign. Seven round-trip flights aboard the National Science
Foundation/NCAR C-130 aircraft took scientists and instruments from
Broomfield, Colorado, to northernmost Canada (up to latitude 87
degree N) and back. The team then analyzed the results and compared
them to the output of two computer models that simulate air chemistry
and winds over the Northern Hemisphere.
Together, the data and model results paint a picture that answers
some key questions about springtime ozone and air chemistry above
North America. For example, the flight data strongly confirmed that
the amount of ozone descending from the stratosphere was too small to
account for the springtime peak. By tracing chemical reactions and
following stratospheric "markers" through their models, the
scientists found that "stratospheric sources could only account for
a
small fraction of the observed ozone [during the spring increase],
but stratospheric ozone is an important contributor to the observed
background levels." Thus, "the seasonal ozone trend was primarily
driven by in situ [in-place] ozone production." By late spring, up
to
five times more ozone was found to be produced locally than delivered
from aloft.
TOPSE also addressed a quite different puzzle: how ozone can
disappear so quickly in wintertime from surface air across the Arctic
Ocean and adjacent land areas. As reported in previous studies,
Arctic surface ozone depletion appears to be due to natural halogen
compounds, such as bromine and chlorine, that react with ozone and
the Arctic snowpack as the spring sun arrives. This surface ozone
depletion in the north is unrelated to the better-known ozone "hole"
in the Antarctic stratosphere, which also forms in the spring. That
southern ozone thinning involves a different set of reactions with
chlorine derived from industrial chemicals, including
chlorofluorocarbons.
During TOPSE, "A virtual ozone hole was observed for the first time
over much of Hudson Bay and over the Arctic Ocean," write the
authors. Low-level winds, they note, "can distribute ozone-depleted
air over a larger region beyond the Arctic than had been previously
recognized." TOPSE was able to map episodes of surface ozone
depletion over much of the Arctic Ocean, northern Canada, and
Greenland. The Arctic Ocean appears to be the origin of these
depletions, but winds can move these chemically processed air masses
to more southerly latitudes.
Even at its peak levels, Northern Hemisphere ozone is far less
prevalent in the lower to middle troposphere than in the higher
stratosphere. This means that the seasonal waxing and waning at lower
altitudes studied in TOPSE should have little effect on the
ultraviolet light that reaches people, animals, and plants.
Still needed, according to TOPSE scientists, are more-extensive
measurements of the halogens that drive ground-level Arctic ozone
depletion, as well as a better understanding of the atmospheric
exchange between stratosphere and troposphere--a process the
scientists note is "far from understood."
The National Science Foundation provided major funding for TOPSE.
points to a significant relationship between tropospheric ozone
chemistry and toxic trace elements, such as mercury.
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The National Center for Atmospheric Research and UCAR Office of Programs are operated by UCAR under the sponsorship of the National Science Foundation and other agencies. Opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect the views of any of UCAR's sponsors. UCAR is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer.
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Prepared for the web by Carlye Calvin Last revised: Thursday, March 20, 2003 3:19 PM |
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