Methane, carbon monoxide and methylchloroform in the Southern Hemisphere

New observational data on CH4, CO and CH3CCl3 in the Southern Hemisphere are reported. The data are analyzed for long term trends and seasonal cycles. CH3CCl3 data are used to scale the OH fields incorporated in a two-dimensional model, which in turn, is used to constrain the magnitude of a global C...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of atmospheric chemistry 1986-03, Vol.4 (1), p.3-42
Hauptverfasser: Fraser, P. J., Hyson, P., Rasmussen, R. A., Crawford, A. J., Khalil, M. A. K.
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container_issue 1
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container_title Journal of atmospheric chemistry
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creator Fraser, P. J.
Hyson, P.
Rasmussen, R. A.
Crawford, A. J.
Khalil, M. A. K.
description New observational data on CH4, CO and CH3CCl3 in the Southern Hemisphere are reported. The data are analyzed for long term trends and seasonal cycles. CH3CCl3 data are used to scale the OH fields incorporated in a two-dimensional model, which in turn, is used to constrain the magnitude of a global CH4 source function. The possible causes of observed seasonality of CH3CCl3, CH4 and CO are identified, and several other aspects of observed CH4 variability are discussed. Possible future research directions are also given.
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source Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals; NASA Technical Reports Server
subjects Chemical composition and interactions. Ionic interactions and processes
Earth, ocean, space
Environment Pollution
Exact sciences and technology
External geophysics
Meteorology
title Methane, carbon monoxide and methylchloroform in the Southern Hemisphere
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