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Atmospheric composition change – global and regional air quality

Paul S. Monks, +68 more
- 01 Oct 2009 - 
- Vol. 43, Iss: 33, pp 5268-5350
TLDR
A review of the state of scientific understanding in relation to global and regional air quality is outlined in this article, in terms of emissions, processing and transport of trace gases and aerosols.
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This article is published in Atmospheric Environment.The article was published on 2009-10-01 and is currently open access. It has received 760 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Air quality index.

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An inventory of gaseous and primary aerosol emissions in Asia in the year 2000 : NASA global tropospheric experiment transport and chemical evolution over the pacific (TRACE-P): Measurements and analysis (TRACEP1)

TL;DR: In this paper, an inventory of air pollutant emissions in Asia in the year 2000 is developed to support atmospheric modeling and analysis of observations taken during the TRACE-P experiment funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the ACE-Asia experiment, in which emissions are estimated for all major anthropogenic sources, including biomass burning, in 64 regions of Asia.

Secondary Organic Aerosol Formation from Anthropogenic Air Pollution: Rapid and Higher than Expected

TL;DR: This paper showed that reactive anthropogenic VOCs (AVOCs) produce much larger amounts of SOA than these models predict, even shortly after sunrise, and a significant fraction of the excess SOA is formed from first-generation AVOC oxidation products.
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Mountain Weather and Climate

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of mountain bioclimatology and changes in mountain climates, and discuss the role of orography in the evolution of mountain climate.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

North African soil dust and European pollution transport to America during the warm season: Hidden links shown by a passive tracer simulation

TL;DR: In this article, a mesoscale atmospheric model coupled with a dispersion model is used to establish source-receptor relationships between the European-North African aerosol episodes observed over the Caribbean every year during summer and their main sources.
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Temporal and latitudinal distributions of stratospheric N2O isotopomers

TL;DR: In the higher-altitude region, fractionation of the isotopomers is mainly determined by photolysis, but is also affected by physical processes, such as subsidence of air masses in the winter polar vortex induces the intrusion of an upper stratospheric air mass depleted in N2O, and decay of the vortex in the local spring leads to rapid horizontal advection of midlatitude air masses as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stable carbon isotopic compositions of light hydrocarbons over the western North Pacific and implication for their photochemical ages

TL;DR: In this paper, the mixing ratios and stable carbon isotopic compositions (δ13C) were analyzed for light hydrocarbons collected over the western North Pacific in canisters during an oceanographic cruise in May 1999.
Journal ArticleDOI

Climatology of the average water-soluble volume fraction of atmospheric aerosol

TL;DR: In this article, the average water-soluble volume fraction of atmospheric aerosol particles was inferred from measurements at three different locations across Central Europe using a logarithmic normal distribution function, which seems most appropriate to represent the hygroscopicity maximum in the accumulation size range.

Explanatory glossary of terms used in expression of relative isotope ratios and gas ratios

T. B. Coplen
TL;DR: A glossary based on recommendation by the Commission on Isotopic Abundances and Atomic Weights of the IUPAC is presented in this article to clarify expression of quantities related to measurement of isotope and gas ratios by ensuring that quantity equations and not numerical value equations are used to define quantities.
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Frequently Asked Questions (12)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "Atmospheric composition change - global and regional air quality" ?

In this review the state of scientific understanding in relation to global and regional air quality is outlined. Trends in anthropogenic emissions both by region and globally are discussed as well as biomass burning emissions. New findings with respect to the transport of pollutants across the scales are discussed, in particular the move to quantify the impact of long-range transport on regional air quality. In particular, the policy challenges for concerted air quality and climate change policy ( co-benefit ) are discussed. 

Fossil fuel extraction and burning, energy production and consumption, industrial activities, transportation and landfills have also led to the emissions of large quantities of pollutants into the atmosphere. 

A step forward in deriving parameterizations of topographic venting for larger scale models is the quantification of the air mass exchanged vertically on a sub-grid scale. 

Particular areas where understanding is lacking include uncertainties in the mechanisms of the initial oxidation sequences to first generation products, and limitations in the available information on the subsequent chemistry of many of the classes of product known tobe generated. 

the main challenges in the estimation of uncertainties in emissions are related to the uncertainties in input data and in the development of methods for quantifying systematic errors. 

By overlaying the distribution of frequency of occurrence with land use changes, the amount of anthropogenic dust emissions can be evaluated. 

Over the last three decades, fire emissions estimates have developed from early inventories based on average fire return times and biomass estimates to detailed studies based on satellite data and sophisticated modelling predicting emissions with high spatial and temporal resolution. 

Uncertainty in emission scenario analysis at urban scale has also been tackled using Bayesian Monte-Carlo techniques (Deguillaume et al., 2008). 

The degradation of aromatic hydrocarbons, although usually only initiated significantly by reaction with OH, can proceed via a number of different routes to generate a large variety of structurally complex ring-retained and ring-opened products e.g. 

As dust has some unique spectral signatures (Dubovik et al., 2002), it is possible to separate pixels with freshly emitted dust from other aerosols. 

Technical challenges are also linked to fast hygroscopicity measurements for airborne applications in order to document high altitude hygroscopicity. 

Other questions also remain open, such as whether the concentrated emissions of gases, aerosols and aerosol precursors in the megacities have a substantial impact on regional and global climate.