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Determining effective strategies for mitigating surface ozone (O) pollution requires knowledge of the relative ambient concentrations of its precursors, NO , and VOCs. The space-based tropospheric column ratio of formaldehyde to NO (FNR) has been used as an indicator to identify NO -limited versus NO -saturated O formation regimes. Quantitative use of this indicator ratio is subject to three major uncertainties: (1) the split between NO -limited and NO -saturated conditions may shift in space and time, (2) the ratio of the vertically integrated column may not represent the near-surface environment, and (3) satellite products contain errors. We use the GEOS-Chem global chemical transport model to evaluate the quantitative utility of FNR observed from the Ozone Monitoring Instrument over three northern midlatitude source regions. We find that FNR in the model surface layer is a robust predictor of the simulated near-surface O production regime. Extending this surface-based predictor to a column-based FNR requires accounting for differences in the HCHO and NO vertical profiles. We compare four combinations of two OMI HCHO and NO retrievals with modeled FNR. The spatial and temporal correlations between the modeled and satellite-derived FNR vary with the choice of NO product, while the mean offset depends on the choice of HCHO product. Space-based FNR indicates that the spring transition to NO -limited regimes has shifted at least a month earlier over major cities (e.g., New York, London, and Seoul) between 2005 and 2015. This increase in NO sensitivity implies that NO emission controls will improve O air quality more now than it would have a decade ago.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/2017JD026720 | DOI Listing |
Environ Res
October 2025
State Key Laboratory of Black Soils Conservation and Utilization, Northeast Institute of Geography and Agroecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Changchun, 130102, China.
Snow cover has the characteristic of high reflectivity, and the snow particles inside it are prone to form a quasi-liquid layer (QLL) on their surface at temperatures below 0 °C, both of which promote the photolysis and hydrolysis reactions of nitrous acid (HONO). In this study, the CAMx model was updated by incorporating 11 heterogeneous chemical reactions of HONO, including HONO depletion reactions, and was applied to conduct numerical simulations for March 2024 in Northeast China. The results showed that the average HONO flux during the snowmelt period (9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
June 2025
Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, United States.
Climate variability and change introduce a range of air quality outcomes for a given emissions policy. Quantifying this range helps us evaluate the likelihood of meeting air quality targets in an uncertain future climate. Using a global atmospheric chemistry model ensemble, we project how the ozone response to a 10% reduction in anthropogenic nitrogen oxides (NO) emissions varies across three northern midlatitude source regions under two future climate scenarios.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSol Phys
April 2025
National Institute for Astrophysics, Astronomical Observatory of Capodimonte, Salita Moiariello 16, I-80131 Napoli, Italy.
Unlabelled: ESA/NASA's Solar Orbiter (SO) enables us to study the solar corona at closer distances and from different perspectives, which helps us to gain significant insights into the origin of the solar wind. In this work, we present the analysis of solar wind outflows from two locations: a narrow open-field corridor and a small, mid-latitude coronal hole. These outflows were observed off-limb by the Metis coronagraph onboard SO and on-disk by the Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) onboard Hinode.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Bot
April 2025
Department of Botany & Rocky Mountain Herbarium, University of Wyoming, Laramie, WY, USA.
Premise: In the face of novel fire regimes driven by anthropogenic changes to climate, ignitions, and fuels, understanding the evolution and present distribution of fire-adapted traits is critical. Four common fire adaptations in conifers are thick bark, serotinous cones, seedling grass stage, and resprouting.
Methods: We focused on these fire-adapted traits and their abundance in North American conifers within a community phylogenetic context.
Astrobiology
March 2025
Geosciences Barcelona (GEO3BCN), Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (CSIC), Barcelona, Spain.
The intense debate about the presence of methane in the martian atmosphere has stimulated the study of methanogenic species that are adapted to terrestrial habitats that resemble martian environments. We examined the environmental conditions, energy sources, and ecology of terrestrial methanogens that thrive in deep crystalline fractures, subsea hypersaline lakes, and subglacial water bodies, considered analogs of a hypothetical habitable martian subsurface. We combined this information with recent data on the distribution of buried water/ice and radiogenic elements on Mars, and with models of the subsurface thermal regime of this planet, we identified a 4.
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