Intercontinental Transport of Tropical Ozone from Biomass Burning - Views from Satellite and SHADOZ (Southern Hemisphere Additional Ozonesondes)
Abstract
There has been interest in the connection between tropical fires and ozone since about 1980. Photochemically reactive gases released by fires (e.g. NO, CO, volatile organic carbon) interact as they do in an urban environment to form ozone. Interacting with chemical sources, tropical meteorology plays a part in tropospheric ozone distributions in the tropics, through large-scale circulation, deep convection, and regional phenomena like the West African and Asian monsoons. An overview of observations, taken from satellite and from ozone soundings, illustrates regional influences and intercontinental-range ozone transport in the tropics. One of the most striking findings is evidence for impacts of Indian Ocean pollution on the south Atlantic ozone maximum referred to as the "ozone paradox" [Thompson et al., GRL, 2000; JGR, 2003; Chatfield et al., GRL, 2003].
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2003
- Bibcode:
- 2003AGUFM.A22B1059T
- Keywords:
-
- 3314 Convective processes;
- 3374 Tropical meteorology;
- 9305 Africa;
- 9325 Atlantic Ocean;
- 9340 Indian Ocean