Global simulation of H 2 and HD with GEOS-CHEM Heather Price 1, Lyatt Jaeglé 1, Paul Quay 2, Andrew Rice 2, and Richard Gammon 2 University of Washington,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Siberian Biomass Burning Plumes Across the Pacific: Impact on Surface Air Quality in the Pacific Northwest Dan Jaffe, Peter Weiss-Penzias, J.B. Dennison,
Advertisements

Simulations and Inverse Modeling of Global Methyl Chloride 1 School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology 2 Division of Engineering.
Nitrous Oxide: Stratospheric Isotopic Composition and Tropospheric Impact Y. L. Yung, J. Weibel* and R. L. Shia Divisions of Geological and Planetary Sciences.
Interpreting MLS Observations of the Variabilities of Tropical Upper Tropospheric O 3 and CO Chenxia Cai, Qinbin Li, Nathaniel Livesey and Jonathan Jiang.
 Similar picture from MODIS and MISR aerosol optical depth (AOD)  Both biomass and dust emissions in the Sahel during the winter season  Emissions.
FACTORS GOVERNING THE SEASONAL VARIABILITY OF ATMOSPHERIC CARBONYL SULFIDE Parv Suntharalingam Harvard/Univ. of East Anglia A.J. Kettle, S. Montzka, D.
Mercury Chemistry in the Global Atmosphere: Constraints from Mercury Speciation Measurements Noelle Eckley Selin EPS Grad Student Seminar Series 14 February.
Building a Global Modeling Capability for Mercury with GEOS-CHEM Noelle Eckley Selin, Rokjin J. Park, Daniel J. Jacob Constraining the global budget of.
The Atmosphere: Oxidizing Medium In Global Biogeochemical Cycles EARTH SURFACE Emission Reduced gas Oxidized gas/ aerosol Oxidation Uptake Reduction.
Correlation of CO-HCN-C 2 H 2 -C 2 H 6 : Global Constraints on Combustion Sources Biomass burning Biofuels Natural gas/coal C2H6C2H6 ~2 mon CO Fossil fuel.
Building a Global Modeling Capability for Mercury with GEOS-CHEM Noelle Eckley Selin GEOS-CHEM meeting 6 April 2005.
Sarah Strode, Lyatt Jaeglé, Dan Jaffe, Peter Weiss-Penzias, Phil Swartzendruber University of Washington Noelle Eckley Selin, Chris Holmes, Daniel Jacob.
U N I V E R S I T Y O F W A S H I N G T O N S C H O O L O F N U R S I N G Sensitivity of surface O 3 to soil NO x emissions over the U.S. Lyatt Jaeglé.
THE ATMOSPHERE: OXIDIZING MEDIUM IN GLOBAL BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
Constraints on the Production of Nitric Oxide by Lightning as Inferred from Satellite Observations Randall Martin Dalhousie University With contributions.
Global Impacts of Asian Pollution on Nitric Acid Deposition and NO x and Ozone Levels Meredith Galanter Department of Geosciences Princeton University.
INITIAL COMPARISONS OF TES TROPOSPHERIC OZONE WITH GEOS-CHEM Lin Zhang, Daniel J. Jacob, Solene Turquety, Shiliang Wu, Qinbin Li (JPL)
Modeling the isotopic composition of H 2 with the TM5 model using a new photochemical scheme for production from CH 4 and VOCs Gerben Pieterse, Maarten.
Evaluating the Impact of the Atmospheric “ Chemical Pump ” on CO 2 Inverse Analyses P. Suntharalingam GEOS-CHEM Meeting, April 4-6, 2005 Acknowledgements.
This Week—Tropospheric Chemistry READING: Chapter 11 of text Tropospheric Chemistry Data Set Analysis.
Constraining global isoprene emissions with GOME formaldehyde column measurements Changsub Shim, Yuhang Wang, Yunsoo Choi Georgia Institute of Technology.
Evaluating the Role of the CO 2 Source from CO Oxidation P. Suntharalingam Harvard University TRANSCOM Meeting, Tsukuba June 14-18, 2004 Collaborators.
Effects of Tropical Deforestation on Tropospheric Chemistry: A 10-year Study using GEOS-Chem Prasad Kasibhatla, Duke University James Randerson and Yang.
(a)(b)(c) Simulation of upper troposphere CO 2 from two-dimensional and three-dimensional models Xun Jiang 1, Runlie Shia 2, Qinbin Li 1, Moustafa T Chahine.
1 Surface O 3 over Beijing: Constraints from New Surface Observations Yuxuan Wang, Mike B. McElroy, J. William Munger School of Engineering and Applied.
Impact of Reduced Carbon Oxidation on Atmospheric CO 2 : Implications for Inversions P. Suntharalingam TransCom Meeting, June 13-16, 2005 N. Krakauer,
Indirect Validation of Tropospheric Nitrogen Dioxide Retrieved from the OMI Satellite Instrument: Insight into the Seasonal Variation of Nitrogen Oxides.
NEW PERSPECTIVES ON ATMOSPHERIC MERCURY Daniel J. Jacob with Noelle E. Selin and Christopher D. Holmes Supported by NSF, EPA and Sarah Strode and Lyatt.
U N I V E R S I T Y O F W A S H I N G T O N S C H O O L O F N U R S I N G U N I V E R S I T Y O F W A S H I N G T O N DEPARTMENT OF ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES.
Global budget of ethane and constraints on North American sources from INTEX-A aircraft data Yaping Xiao 1, Jennifer A. Logan 1, Daniel.
TOP-DOWN CONSTRAINTS ON REGIONAL CARBON FLUXES USING CO 2 :CO CORRELATIONS FROM AIRCRAFT DATA P. Suntharalingam, D. J. Jacob, Q. Li, P. Palmer, J. A. Logan,
Validation of TES Methane with HIPPO Observations For Use in Adjoint Inverse Modeling Kevin J. Wecht 17 June 2010TES Science Team Meeting Special thanks.
Retrieval and Interpretation of Tropospheric Observations from GOME Randall Martin Daniel Jacob Paul Palmer Sushil Chandra Jerry Ziemke Mian Chin Kelly.
Biogenic Contributions to Methane Trends from 1990 to 2004 Arlene M. Fiore 1 Larry W. Horowitz 1, Ed Dlugokencky 2, J. Jason West.
Seasonal variability of UTLS hydrocarbons observed from ACE and comparisons with WACCM Mijeong Park, William J. Randel, Louisa K. Emmons, and Douglas E.
Human fingerprints on our changing climate Neil Leary Changing Planet Study Group June 28 – July 1, 2011 Cooling the Liberal Arts Curriculum A NASA-GCCE.
Source vs. Sink Contributions to Atmospheric Methane Trends:
Building a Global Modeling Capability for Mercury with GEOS-CHEM Noelle Eckley Selin EPS Day 12 March 2005.
Asian Sources of Methane and Ethane Y. Xiao, D.J. Jacob, J. Wang, G.W. Sachse, D.R. Blake, D.G. Streets, et al. Atmospheric Chemistry Modeling Group Harvard.
QUESTIONS 1. How does the thinning of the stratospheric ozone layer affect the source of OH in the troposphere? 2. Chemical production of ozone in the.
MOZART Development, Evaluation, and Applications at GFDL MOZART Users’ Meeting August 17, 2005 Boulder, CO Arlene M. Fiore Larry W. Horowitz
Constraints on the Production of Nitric Oxide by Lightning as Inferred from Satellite Observations Randall Martin Dalhousie University With contributions.
Measurement of the Long-term trends of Methanol (CH 3 OH) and Carbonyl Sulfide (OCS) Both methyl chloride and carbonyl sulfide have strong infrared bands.
Status of MOZART-2 Larry W. Horowitz GFDL/NOAA MOZART Workshop November 29, 2001.
1 UIUC ATMOS 397G Biogeochemical Cycles and Global Change Lecture 14: Methane and CO Don Wuebbles Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Illinois,
Dylan Millet Harvard University with D. Jacob (Harvard), D. Blake (UCI), T. Custer and J. Williams (MPI), J. de Gouw, C. Warneke, and J. Holloway (NOAA),
Climatic implications of changes in O 3 Loretta J. Mickley, Daniel J. Jacob Harvard University David Rind Goddard Institute for Space Studies How well.
Review: Constraining global isoprene emissions with GOME formaldehyde column measurements Shim et al. Luz Teresa Padró Wei-Chun Hsieh Zhijun Zhao.
HIPPO: Global Carbon Cycle Britton Stephens, NCAR EOL and TIIMES.
Observational Constraints on the Global Methane Budget Ed Dlugokencky NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory Global Monitoring Division Boulder, Colorado.
(a)(b)(c) Simulation of upper troposphere CO 2 from two-dimensional and three-dimensional models Xun Jiang 1, Runlie Shia 2, Qinbin Li 1, Moustafa T Chahine.
Picture: METEOSAT Oct 2000 Tropospheric O 3 budget of the South Atlantic region B. Sauvage, R. V. Martin, A. van Donkelaar, I. Folkins, X.Liu, P. Palmer,
Atmospheric Methane Distribution, Trend, and Linkage with Surface Ozone Arlene M. Fiore 1 Larry W. Horowitz 1, Ed Dlugokencky.
Hauglustaine et al. - HYMN KO Meeting th October Forward modelling with the LMDz-INCA coupled climate-chemistry model; Inverse modelling and data.
MOCA møte Oslo/Kjeller Stig B. Dalsøren Reproducing methane distribution over the last decades with Oslo CTM3.
Analysis of Satellite Observations to Estimate Production of Nitrogen Oxides from Lightning Randall Martin Bastien Sauvage Ian Folkins Chris Sioris Chris.
HYMN: Hydrogen, Methane and Nitrous oxide: Trend variability, budgets and interactions with the biosphere GOCE-CT TM4 model evaluations
27-28/10/2005IGBP-QUEST Fire Fast Track Initiative Workshop Inverse Modeling of CO Emissions Results for Biomass Burning Gabrielle Pétron National Center.
CONSTRAINTS FROM RGM MEASUREMENTS ON GLOBAL MERCURY CHEMISTRY Noelle Eckley Selin 1 Daniel J. Jacob 1, Rokjin J. Park 1, Robert M. Yantosca 1, Sarah Strode,
TROPOSPHERIC OZONE AS A CLIMATE GAS AND AIR POLLUTANT: THE CASE FOR CONTROLLING METHANE Daniel J. Jacob with Loretta J. Mickley, Arlene M. Fiore, Yaping.
Global 3-D Model Analysis of TRACE-P HCN and CH3CN Measurements
Randall Martin Dalhousie University
Top-down constraints on emissions of biogenic trace gases from North America Dylan Millet with D.J. Jacob, R.C. Hudman, S. Turquety, C. Holmes (Harvard)
TOP-DOWN CONSTRAINTS ON EMISSION INVENTORIES OF OZONE PRECURSORS
GLOBAL BUDGET OF ATMOSPHERIC ACETONE
Daniel J. Jacob Harvard University
Building a Global Modeling Capability for Mercury with GEOS-CHEM
Effects of global change on U.S. ozone air quality
Climatic implications of changes in O3
The global cycle of methane CMI methane project
Presentation transcript:

Global simulation of H 2 and HD with GEOS-CHEM Heather Price 1, Lyatt Jaeglé 1, Paul Quay 2, Andrew Rice 2, and Richard Gammon 2 University of Washington, Seattle Departments of 1 Atmospheric Sciences and 2 Oceanography 2 nd GEOS-CHEM Users Meeting 6 Apr 2005

Sinks (Tg/yr) MOZART Novelli GEOS-CHEM OH c Soils c Total Sources (Tg/yr) MOZART a Novelli c GEOS-CHEM d Hauglustaine Fossil Fuel 16 15±10 20 Biomass Burning 13 16±5 10 Biofuel 5 b 4.4 Photochemical Methane Oxidation 26 ± 9 27 BVOC Oxidation 14 ± 7 14 Ocean 5 3 ± 2 ~ N fixation 5 3 ± 1 ~ Total a Hauglustaine et al., 2002; Photochemical production includes Methane(27.5Tg) and nonmethane hydrocarbons (14.2Tg): Isoprene, Acetone, Monoterpenes, and Methanol. b Andreae & Merlet, 2001: bf H 2 /CO = 0.32 per molecule c Novelli, 1999: bb H 2 /CO = 0.29, for fossil fuels Novelli uses global CO source of 500Tg/yr from Logan et al., 1981, Pacnya & Graedel, 1995 and WMO, 1995 Lifetime, years Annual Global Budget of Molecular Hydrogen in the Troposphere

H 2 and HD in the GEOS-CHEM Model Based on the GEOS-CHEM offline CO simulation v Sinks OH d H 2 + OH → H 2 O + H k = 1.5x e -2000/T SoilsUniform Deposition Velocity over land = cm/s Sources H 2 /CO (per molecule) Fossil Fuels 0.59 a Biomass Burning 0.30 c Biofuels 0.32 b Photochemical yield relative to CO Methane Oxidation 0.50 BVOC Oxidation 0.50 a Oliver et al., 1996 CO emission inventory EDGAR H 2 /CO (per molecule) = or 0.042Tg H 2 /CO b Andreae & Merlet, 2001: bf H 2 /CO = 0.32 or 0.023Tg H 2 /CO c Novelli, 1999; bb H 2 /CO= 0.30 or 0.022Tg H 2 /CO d JPL reported average of nine studies detailed in Ravishankara et al., 1981 and in excellent agreement with measurements by Talukdar et al., k

H 2 ppbv GEOS-CHEM Simulation of H 2 Surface (JJA) Surface (DJF)

Validating the GEOS-CHEM H 2 simulation against CMDL H 2 Observations CMDL sites Surface (JJA) CMDL sites H 2 ppbv Surface (DJF) (Novelli, 1999) Climate Monitoring and Diagnostics Laboratory: ftp:// /ccg/h2/flask/

Fall % Bias: R: 0.71 Summer % Bias: 0.71 R: 0.80 Winter % Bias: 1.25 R: 0.67 Spring % Bias: 0.70 R: 0.56 Latitude H 2 ppbv H 2 Interhemispheric Gradient ~40 ppbv gradient GEOS-CHEM H 2 ppbv GEOS-CHEM H 2 simulation vs. CMDL observations GEOS-CHEM model NOAA CMDL observations ( ) CMDL H 2 ppbv Spring Summer Autumn Winter Correlation (r=0.76) model-obs obs Bias: x100 = 0.45%

H 2 Seasonal Cycle Barrow (89-03) Bermuda(91-03) Mauna Loa(89-03) 40.7 S, E Model CMDL observations Ascension (89-03) Cape Grim(91-03) Palmer Station(94-03) Northern Hemisphere Southern Hemisphere H 2 ppbv Month Month S, 14.4 W Month Month Month Month H 2 ppbv N,156.6 W 32.4 N, 64.7 W19.5 N, W 64.9 S, 64.0 W

H 2 Vertical Profiles Nov 2002-Aug 2004 Park Falls, Wisc N,-90.27W H 2 (ppbv) km Poker Flat, Alaska 65.07N, W H 2 (ppbv) Sept Oct Nov March April May Cook Islands S, –159.83W H 2 (ppbv) km Soil Model Observations

Adding hydrogen isotope (HD) to the GEOS-CHEM model 1.Model development based on measured ratios of HD/H 2 for various sources, sinks, and reservoirs 2.Will give additional constraint to the H 2 budget sources and sinks 3.Determine the contributions of sources and sinks to atmospheric  D and interhemispheric gradient (Gerst & Quay, 2000, 2001)

Deuterium Source & Sink Signatures Soil, fossil fuel, and biomass burning fractionation: Gerst & Quay, 2001 OH fractionation: Ehhalt et al., 1989 δD of the global Troposphere = 130 % o TermH 2 Tg/yr  D% o  Fossil Fuels Biomass Burning Biofuels Methane Oxidation28156 BVOC Oxidation14156 OH Sink Soil Sink

JJA  D (% 0 ) SMOW H 2 ppbv Annual  D Surface H 2 and  D

 D (% 0 vs SMOW) 1998,2002,2004 Ocean Cruise Observations Barrow Cheeka Peak DJF  D Model, Surface & Cruise Observations Biofuels & Fossil Fuels

 D vs. Latitude  sinks  D (atmos) ~40 % 0 gradient  D Observational Data from Rice & Quay, 2004 and Gerst, & Quay, Additional enrichment from Stratosphere?

GEOS-CHEM captures well the H 2 and  D latitudinal gradient (H 2 ~40ppbv,  D~40% o ) and seasonality. Soil Sink uncertainty: incorporate soil moisture, precipitation, to better constrain soil deposition Next, help explain the  D observations of stratospheric enrichment (Röckmann et al., 2003; Rahn et al., 2003) Could  D measurements be used to constrain Asian biofuel emissions? Summary Biofuel + Fossil Fuel Biomass Burning Fossil Fuels DJF  D