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Singh et al. 1994
Singh, H.B., Herlth, D., O'Hara, D., Zahnle, K., Bradshaw, J.D., Sandholm, S.T., Talbot, R., Gregory, G.L., Sachse, G.W., Blake, D.R. and Wofsy, S.C. (1994). Summertime distribution of PAN and other reactive nitrogen species in the northern high-latitude atmosphere of eastern Canada. Journal of Geophysical Research 99: doi: 10.1029/93JD00946. issn: 0148-0227.

Aircraft measurements of key reactive nitrogen species (NO, NO2, PAN, PPN, NO3-, NOy), C1 to C6 hydrocarbons, acetone, O3, chemical tracers (C2Cl4, CO), and important meteorological parameters were performed over eastern Canada during July to August 1990 at altitudes between 0 and 6 km as part of an Arctic Boundary Layer Expedition (ABLE3B). In the free troposphere, PAN was found to be the single most abundant reaction nitrogen species constituting a major fraction of NOy and was significantly more abundant than NOx and HNO3. PAN and O3 were well correlated both in their fine and gross structures. Compared to data previously collected in the Arctic/subarctic atmosphere over Alaska (ABLE3A), the lower troposphere (0--4 km) over eastern Canada was found to contain larger reactive nitrogen and anthropogenic tracer concentrations. At higher altitudes (4--6 km) the atmospheric composition was in many ways similar to what was seen over Alaska and supports the view that a large-scale reservoir of PAN (and NOy) is present in the upper troposphere over the entire Arctic/subarctic region. The reactive nitrogen budget based on missions conducted from the North Bay site (missions 2--10) showed that a small shortfall, whereas the budget for data collected from the Goose Bay operation (missions 11--19) showed essential balance. It is calculated that 15--20 ppt of the observed NOx may find its source from the available PAN reservoir. Meteorological considerations as well as relationships between reactive nitrogen and tracer species suggest that the atmosphere over eastern Canada during summer is greatly influenced by forest fires and transported industrial pollution.

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Abstract

Keywords
Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Troposphere—composition and chemistry, Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Pollution—urban and regional, Atmospheric Composition and Structure, Instruments and techniques, Meteorology and Atmospheric Dynamics, Synoptic-scale meteorology, Exploration Geophysics, General or miscellaneous
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
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