000902297 001__ 902297
000902297 005__ 20240712101024.0
000902297 0247_ $$2doi$$a10.5194/acp-21-14535-2021
000902297 0247_ $$2ISSN$$a1680-7316
000902297 0247_ $$2ISSN$$a1680-7324
000902297 0247_ $$2Handle$$a2128/28948
000902297 0247_ $$2altmetric$$aaltmetric:114327758
000902297 0247_ $$2WOS$$aWOS:000703889100001
000902297 037__ $$aFZJ-2021-04160
000902297 082__ $$a550
000902297 1001_ $$00000-0001-9373-0712$$aLannuque, Victor$$b0$$eCorresponding author
000902297 245__ $$aOrigins and characterization of CO and O<sub>3</sub> in the African upper troposphere
000902297 260__ $$aKatlenburg-Lindau$$bEGU$$c2021
000902297 3367_ $$2DRIVER$$aarticle
000902297 3367_ $$2DataCite$$aOutput Types/Journal article
000902297 3367_ $$0PUB:(DE-HGF)16$$2PUB:(DE-HGF)$$aJournal Article$$bjournal$$mjournal$$s1636437196_22225
000902297 3367_ $$2BibTeX$$aARTICLE
000902297 3367_ $$2ORCID$$aJOURNAL_ARTICLE
000902297 3367_ $$00$$2EndNote$$aJournal Article
000902297 520__ $$aBetween December 2005 and 2013, the In-service Aircraft for a Global Observing System (IAGOS) program produced almost daily in situ measurements of CO and O3 between Europe and southern Africa. IAGOS data combined with measurements from the Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer (IASI) instrument aboard the Metop-A satellite (2008–2013) are used to characterize meridional distributions and seasonality of CO and O3 in the African upper troposphere (UT). The FLEXPART particle dispersion model and the SOFT-IO model which combines the FLEXPART model with CO emission inventories are used to explore the sources and origins of the observed transects of CO and O3.We focus our analysis on two main seasons: December to March (DJFM) and June to October (JJASO). These seasons have been defined according to the position of Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ), determined using in situ measurements from IAGOS. During both seasons, the UT CO meridional transects are characterized by maximum mixing ratios located 10∘ from the position of the ITCZ above the dry regions inside the hemisphere of the strongest Hadley cell (132 to 165 ppb at 0–5∘ N in DJFM and 128 to 149 ppb at 3–7∘ S in JJASO) and decreasing values southward and northward. The O3 meridional transects are characterized by mixing ratio minima of ∼42–54 ppb at the ITCZ (10–16∘ S in DJFM and 5–8∘ N in JJASO) framed by local maxima (∼53–71 ppb) coincident with the wind shear zones north and south of the ITCZ. O3 gradients are strongest in the hemisphere of the strongest Hadley cell. IASI UT O3 distributions in DJFM have revealed that the maxima are a part of a crescent-shaped O3 plume above the Atlantic Ocean around the Gulf of Guinea.CO emitted at the surface is transported towards the ITCZ by the trade winds and then convectively uplifted. Once in the upper troposphere, CO-enriched air masses are transported away from the ITCZ by the upper branches of the Hadley cells and accumulate within the zonal wind shear zones where the maximum CO mixing ratios are found. Anthropogenic and fires both contribute, by the same order of magnitude, to the CO budget of the African upper troposphere.Local fires have the highest contribution and drive the location of the observed UT CO maxima. Anthropogenic CO contribution is mostly from Africa during the entire year, with a low seasonal variability. There is also a large contribution from Asia in JJASO related to the fast convective uplift of polluted air masses in the Asian monsoon region which are further westward transported by the tropical easterly jet (TEJ) and the Asian monsoon anticyclone (AMA).O3 minima correspond to air masses that were recently uplifted from the surface where mixing ratios are low at the ITCZ. The O3 maxima correspond to old high-altitude air masses uplifted from either local or long-distance area of high O3 precursor emissions (Africa and South America during all the year, South Asia mainly in JJASO) and must be created during transport by photochemistry.
000902297 536__ $$0G:(DE-HGF)POF4-2111$$a2111 - Air Quality (POF4-211)$$cPOF4-211$$fPOF IV$$x0
000902297 588__ $$aDataset connected to CrossRef, Journals: juser.fz-juelich.de
000902297 7001_ $$00000-0003-3410-2139$$aSauvage, Bastien$$b1$$eCorresponding author
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aBarret, Brice$$b2
000902297 7001_ $$00000-0001-5602-5328$$aClark, Hannah$$b3
000902297 7001_ $$00000-0003-2364-5234$$aAthier, Gilles$$b4
000902297 7001_ $$00000-0001-6935-1106$$aBoulanger, Damien$$b5
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aCammas, Jean-Pierre$$b6
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aCousin, Jean-Marc$$b7
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aFontaine, Alain$$b8
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aLe Flochmoën, Eric$$b9
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aNédélec, Philippe$$b10
000902297 7001_ $$00000-0001-5746-6504$$aPetetin, Hervé$$b11
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aPfaffenzeller, Isabelle$$b12
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)129146$$aRohs, Susanne$$b13
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-Juel1)16203$$aSmit, Herman G. J.$$b14$$ufzj
000902297 7001_ $$0P:(DE-HGF)0$$aWolff, Pawel$$b15
000902297 7001_ $$aThouret, Valérie$$b16
000902297 773__ $$0PERI:(DE-600)2069847-1$$a10.5194/acp-21-14535-2021$$gVol. 21, no. 19, p. 14535 - 14555$$n19$$p14535 - 14555$$tAtmospheric chemistry and physics$$v21$$x1680-7324$$y2021
000902297 8564_ $$uhttps://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/902297/files/acp-21-14535-2021.pdf$$yOpenAccess
000902297 909CO $$ooai:juser.fz-juelich.de:902297$$pdnbdelivery$$pdriver$$pVDB$$popen_access$$popenaire
000902297 9101_ $$0I:(DE-588b)5008462-8$$6P:(DE-Juel1)129146$$aForschungszentrum Jülich$$b13$$kFZJ
000902297 9101_ $$0I:(DE-588b)5008462-8$$6P:(DE-Juel1)16203$$aForschungszentrum Jülich$$b14$$kFZJ
000902297 9131_ $$0G:(DE-HGF)POF4-211$$1G:(DE-HGF)POF4-210$$2G:(DE-HGF)POF4-200$$3G:(DE-HGF)POF4$$4G:(DE-HGF)POF$$9G:(DE-HGF)POF4-2111$$aDE-HGF$$bForschungsbereich Erde und Umwelt$$lErde im Wandel – Unsere Zukunft nachhaltig gestalten$$vDie Atmosphäre im globalen Wandel$$x0
000902297 9141_ $$y2021
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0200$$2StatID$$aDBCoverage$$bSCOPUS$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0160$$2StatID$$aDBCoverage$$bEssential Science Indicators$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0LIC:(DE-HGF)CCBY4$$2HGFVOC$$aCreative Commons Attribution CC BY 4.0
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)1150$$2StatID$$aDBCoverage$$bCurrent Contents - Physical, Chemical and Earth Sciences$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)9905$$2StatID$$aIF >= 5$$bATMOS CHEM PHYS : 2019$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0501$$2StatID$$aDBCoverage$$bDOAJ Seal$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0500$$2StatID$$aDBCoverage$$bDOAJ$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0113$$2StatID$$aWoS$$bScience Citation Index Expanded$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0700$$2StatID$$aFees$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0150$$2StatID$$aDBCoverage$$bWeb of Science Core Collection$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0510$$2StatID$$aOpenAccess
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0030$$2StatID$$aPeer Review$$bDOAJ : Peer review$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0561$$2StatID$$aArticle Processing Charges$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0100$$2StatID$$aJCR$$bATMOS CHEM PHYS : 2019$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0300$$2StatID$$aDBCoverage$$bMedline$$d2021-02-02
000902297 915__ $$0StatID:(DE-HGF)0199$$2StatID$$aDBCoverage$$bClarivate Analytics Master Journal List$$d2021-02-02
000902297 9201_ $$0I:(DE-Juel1)IEK-8-20101013$$kIEK-8$$lTroposphäre$$x0
000902297 9801_ $$aFullTexts
000902297 980__ $$ajournal
000902297 980__ $$aVDB
000902297 980__ $$aUNRESTRICTED
000902297 980__ $$aI:(DE-Juel1)IEK-8-20101013
000902297 981__ $$aI:(DE-Juel1)ICE-3-20101013