Title of article :
Ozone and meteorological boundary-layer conditions at Summit, Greenland, during 3–21 June 2000
Author/Authors :
Detlev Helmig، نويسنده , , James Boulter، نويسنده , , Donald David، نويسنده , , John W. Birks، نويسنده , , Nicolas J. Cullen، نويسنده , , Konrad Steffen، نويسنده , , Bryan J. Johnson، نويسنده , , Samuel J. Oltmans، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Abstract :
The temporal and spatial distributions of boundary-layer ozone were studied during June 2000 at Summit, Greenland, using surface-level measurements and vertical profiling from a tethered balloon platform. Three weeks of continuous ozone surface data, 133 meteorological vertical profile data and 82 ozone vertical profile data sets were collected from the surface to a maximum altitude of 1400 m above ground.
The lower atmosphere at Summit was characterized by the prevalence of strong stable conditions with strong surface temperature inversions. These inversions reversed to neutral to slightly unstable conditions between 9.00 and 18.00 h local time with the formation of shallow mixing heights of 70–250 m above the surface.
The surface ozone mixing ratio ranged from 39 to 68 ppbv and occasionally had rapid changes of up to 20 ppb in 12 h. The diurnal mean ozone mixing ratio showed diurnal trends indicating meteorological and photochemical controls of surface ozone. Vertical profiles were within the range of 37–76 ppb and showed strong stratification in the lower troposphere. A high correlation of high ozone/low water vapor air masses indicated the transport of high tropospheric/low stratospheric air into the lower boundary layer. A 0.1–3 ppb decline of the ozone mixing ratio towards the surface was frequently observed within the neutrally stable mixed layer during midday hours. These data suggest that the boundary-layer ozone mixing ratio and ozone depletion and deposition to the snowpack are influenced by photochemical processes and/or transport phenomena that follow diurnal dependencies. With 37 ppb of ozone being the lowest mixing ratio measured in all data no evidence was seen for the occurrence of ozone depletion episodes similar to those that have been reported within the boundary layer at coastal Arctic sites during springtime.
Keywords :
Ozone deposition , Boundary layer , Tropospheric ozone , Balloon vertical profiling
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment
Journal title :
Atmospheric Environment