Formation of noctilucent clouds by an extraterrestrial impact
Abstract
The consequences of enhanced water vapor concentrations on the middle atmosphere (50-100 km) chemistry and heat budget are considered. The increased mixing ratio of hydrogen dramatically decreases the ozone concentration above 60 km. Catalytic reactions with odd hydrogen are the main sink of ozone in this region. The ozone reduction causes a lowering of the average height of the mesopause, as well as a lowering of the average temperature. The globally-averaged albedo resulting from mesopheric ice clouds is dependent on the particulate size and shape, and can be as high as several percent, preferentially covering the summer hemisphere. This could have important implications for the short-term climate following a large-body impact. Similar effects would also result from an encounter with a more extended object such as a swarm of cosmic debris or a dense interstellar cloud.
- Publication:
-
IN: Geological implications of impacts of large asteroids and comets on the earth (A84-25651 10-42). Boulder
- Pub Date:
- 1982
- Bibcode:
- 1982giil.rept..211M
- Keywords:
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- Asteroids;
- Atmospheric Moisture;
- Impact Damage;
- Noctilucent Clouds;
- Biological Evolution;
- Climate;
- Extinction;
- Ice Clouds;
- Middle Atmosphere;
- Ozone;
- Water Vapor;
- Geophysics