The NASA Atmospheric Tomography (ATom) mission built a photochemical climatology of air parcels based on in situ measurements with the NASA DC-8 aircraft along objectively planned profiling transects through the middle of the Pacific and Atlantic oceans. In this paper we present and analyze a data set of 10 s (2 km) merged and gap-filled observations of the key reactive species driving the chemical budgets of O3 and CH4 (O3 , CH4 , CO, H2 O, HCHO, H2 O2 , CH3 OOH, C2 H6 , higher alkanes, alkenes, aromatics, NOx , HNO3 , HNO4 , peroxyacetyl nitrate, other organic nitrates), consisting of 146 494 distinct air parcels from ATom deployments 1 through 4. Six models calculated the O3 and CH4 photochemical tendencies from this modeling data stream for ATom 1. We find that 80 %–90 % of the total reactivity lies in the top 50 % of the parcels and 25 %– 35 % in the top 10 %, supporting previous model-only studies that tropospheric chemistry is driven by a fraction of all the air. In other words, accurate simulation of the least reactive 50 % of the troposphere is unimportant for global budgets. Surprisingly, the probability densities of species and reactiv-
Heterogeneity and chemical reactivity of the remote troposphere defined by aircraft measurements
Guo, H., C.M. Flynn, M.J. Prather, S.A. Strode, S.D. Steenrod, L. Emmons, F. Lacey, J.-F. Lamarque, A.M. Fiore, G. Correa, L.T. Murray, G.M. Wolfe, J.M. St. Clair, M. Kim, J. Crounse, G. Diskin, J. DiGangi, B.C. Daube, R. Commane, K. McKain, J. Peischl, T.B. Ryerson, C. Thompson, T.F. Hanisco, D. Blake, N.J. Blake, E.C. Apel, R.S. Hornbrook, J.W. Elkins, E.J. Hintsa, F.L. Moore, and S. Wofsy (2021), Heterogeneity and chemical reactivity of the remote troposphere defined by aircraft measurements, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 21, 13729-13746, doi:10.5194/acp-21-13729-2021.
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Research Program
Tropospheric Composition Program (TCP)
Mission
ATom
