Measurements of reactive nitrogen produced by tropical thunderstorms during BIBLE‐C
Article 2007 en
Authors
MK
M. Koike
YK
Yasuyuki Kondo
KK
Kazuyuki Kita
Abstract
2 min read
The Biomass Burning and Lightning Experiment phase C (BIBLE‐C) aircraft mission was carried out near Darwin, Australia (12°S, 131°E) in December 2000. This was the first aircraft experiment designed to estimate lightning NO production rates in the tropics, where production is considered to be most intense. During the two flights (flights 10 and 13 made on December 9 and 11–12, respectively) enhancements of NO x (NO + NO 2 ) up to 1000 and 1600 parts per trillion by volume (pptv, 10‐s data) were observed at altitudes between 11.5 and 14 km. The Geostationary Meteorological Satellite (GMS) cloud (brightness temperature) data and ground‐based lightning measurements by the Global Positioning and Tracking System (GPATS) indicate that there were intensive lightning events over the coast of the Gulf of Carpentaria, which took place upstream from our measurement area 10 to 14 h prior to the measurements. For these two flights, air in which NO x exceeded 100 pptv extended over 620 × 140 and 400 × 170 km 2 (wind direction × perpendicular direction), respectively, suggesting a significant impact of lightning NO production on NO x levels in the tropics. We estimate the amount of NO x observed between 11.5 and 14 km produced by the thunderstorms to be 3.3 and 1.8 × 10 29 NO molecules for flights 10 and 13, respectively. By using the GPATS lightning flash count data, column NO production rates are estimated to be 1.9–4.4 and 21–49 × 10 25 NO molecules per single flash for these two flight data sets. In these estimations, it is assumed that the column NO production between 0 and 16 km is greater than the observed values between 11.5 and 14 km by a factor of 3.2, which is derived using results reported by Pickering et al. (1998). There are however large uncertainties in the GPATS lightning data in this study and care must be made when the production rates are referred. Uncertainties in these estimates are discussed. The impact on the ozone production rate is also described.
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