Atmospheric Ozone and Methane in a Changing Climate
Item
Title (Dublin Core)
Atmospheric Ozone and Methane in a Changing Climate
Description (Dublin Core)
Ozone and methane are chemically active climate-forcing agents affected by climate–chemistry interactions in the atmosphere. Key chemical reactions and processes affecting ozone and methane are presented. It is shown that climate-chemistry interactions have a significant impact on the two compounds. Ozone, which is a secondary compound in the atmosphere, produced and broken down mainly in the troposphere and stratosphre through chemical reactions involving atomic oxygen (O), NOx compounds (NO, NO2), CO, hydrogen radicals (OH, HO2), volatile organic compounds (VOC) and chlorine (Cl, ClO) and bromine (Br, BrO). Ozone is broken down through changes in the atmospheric distribution of the afore mentioned compounds. Methane is a primary compound emitted from different sources (wetlands, rice production, livestock, mining, oil and gas production and landfills).Methane is broken down by the hydroxyl radical (OH). OH is significantly affected by methane emissions, defined by the feedback factor, currently estimated to be in the range 1.3 to 1.5, and increasing with increasing methane emission. Ozone and methane changes are affected by NOx emissions. While ozone in general increase with increases in NOx emission, methane is reduced, due to increases in OH. Several processes where current and future changes have implications for climate-chemistry interactions are identified. It is also shown that climatic changes through dynamic processes could have significant impact on the atmospheric chemical distribution of ozone and methane, as we can see through the impact of Quasi Biennial Oscillation (QBO). Modeling studies indicate that increases in ozone could be more pronounced toward the end of this century. Thawing permafrost could lead to important positive feedbacks in the climate system. Large amounts of organic material are stored in the upper layers of the permafrost in the yedoma deposits in Siberia, where 2 to 5% of the deposits could be organic material. During thawing of permafrost, parts of the organic material that is deposited could be converted to methane. Furthermore, methane stored in deposits under shallow waters in the Arctic have the potential to be released in a future warmer climate with enhanced climate impact on methane, ozone and stratospheric water vapor. Studies performed by several groups show that the transport sectors have the potential for significant impacts on climate-chemistry interactions. There are large uncertainties connected to ozone and methane changes from the transport sector, and to methane release and climate impact during permafrost thawing.
Creator (Dublin Core)
Ivar S. A. Isaksen
Terje K. Berntsen
Stig B. Dalsøren
Kostas Eleftheratos
Yvan Orsolini
Bjørg Rognerud
Frode Stordal
Ole Amund Søvde
Christos Zerefos
Chris D. Holmes
Subject (Dublin Core)
ozone
methane
atmospheric processes
chemistry
dynamics
Quasi Biennial Oscillation (QBO)
permafrost
Meteorology. Climatology
QC851-999
Publisher (Dublin Core)
MDPI AG
Date (Dublin Core)
2014-07-01T00:00:00Z
Type (Dublin Core)
article
Identifier (Dublin Core)
2073-4433
10.3390/atmos5030518
https://doaj.org/article/846abc3f3dd74816a300785b8231ea45
Source (Dublin Core)
Atmosphere, Vol 5, Iss 3, Pp 518-535 (2014)
Language (Dublin Core)
EN
Relation (Dublin Core)
http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4433/5/3/518
https://doaj.org/toc/2073-4433
Provenance (Dublin Core)
Journal Licence: CC BY