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Atmospheric hydrogen cyanide (HCN): biomass burning source, ocean sink ?
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Abstract
- The observed seasonal amplitude of atmospheric HCN concentrations implies an atmospheric lifetime of only a few months for HCN, much shorter than is commonly assumed from oxidation by OH (a few years). We propose that ocean uptake provides the missing sink, and show with a global 3-D model simulation that the observations of atmospheric HCN can be roughly reproduced in a scenario where biomass burning provides the main source (1.4–2.9 Tg N yr−1) and ocean uptake provides the main sink (HCN atmospheric lifetime of 2–4 months). Such a budget implies that HCN is a sensitive tracer of biomass burning on large scales, of particular value because it is readily observed from space. The ocean sink hypothesis can be tested with measurements of HCN concentrations in marine air and seawater.
- Subjects :
- geography
geography.geographical_feature_category
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Meteorology
Hydrogen cyanide
010501 environmental sciences
Atmospheric sciences
01 natural sciences
7. Clean energy
Sink (geography)
Troposphere
chemistry.chemical_compound
Geophysics
chemistry
13. Climate action
TRACER
Model simulation
General Earth and Planetary Sciences
Environmental science
Seawater
Biomass burning
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0d94cb25a406e305c028b1b5cd9e881e