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  • Other Sources  (13)
  • 1990-1994  (13)
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  • 1
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    Unknown
    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: The compound 1,1-dichloro--2,2,2-trifluoroethane (CFC-123) has been proposed as an industrial substitute for trichlorofluoromethane (CFC-11). The chemical destruction rates of CFC-123 by various processes is calculated here using a three-dimensional global model of the atmosphere, and it is confirmed that the chief sink of CFC-123 is destruction by OH radicals below 12 km, accounting for 88 percent of its loss. The calculated destruction rate is greatest in the equatorial region below 2 km. The calculated steady-state lifetime of CFC-123 is 1.5 years, much shorter than that of CFC-11, the destruction of which is largely confined to the stratosphere. For equal rates of CFC-123 and CFC-11 emission to the atmosphere, the molar content in the atmosphere and the injection rate of chlorine into the stratosphere are, respectively, 48 and 14 times greater for CFC-11 than for CFC-123 in steady state.
    Keywords: ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
    Type: Nature (ISSN 0028-0836); 344; 47-49
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: A comprehensive review of the chemistry and spectroscopy of the Uranian atmosphere is presented by means of earth-based, earth-orbital, and Voyager 2 observations covering the UV, visible, infrared, and radio wavelength regions. It is inferred from these observations, in concert with the average density of about 1.3 g/cu cm, that the Uranian atmosphere is enriched in heavy elements relative to solar composition. Pre-Voyager earth-based observations of CH4 bands in the visible region and Voyager radio occultation data imply a CH4/H2 volume mixing ratio of about 2 percent corresponding to an enrichment of approximately 24 times the solar value of 0.000835. In contrast to CH4, microwave observations indicate an apparent depletion of NH3 in the 155-to-200-K region of the atmosphere by 100 to 200 times relative to the solar NH3/H2 mixing ratio of -0.000174. It is suggested that the temporal and latitudinal variations deduced for the NH3/H2 mixing ratio in this region of the Uranian atmosphere are due to atmospheric circulation effects.
    Keywords: LUNAR AND PLANETARY EXPLORATION
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: We briefly review current knowledge and pinpoint some of the major areas of uncertainty for the following fundamental processes: (1) convection, condensation nuclei, and cloud formation; (2) oceanic circulation and its coupling to the atmosphere and cryosphere; (3) land surface hydrology and hydrology-vegetation coupling; (4) biogeochemistry of greenhouse gases; and (5) upper atmospheric chemistry and circulation.
    Keywords: ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
    Type: University Corp. for Atmospheric Research, Modeling the Earth System, Volume 3; p 9-38
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-01-25
    Description: We are developing a method for measuring ambient OH by monitoring its rate of reaction with a chemical species. Our technique involves the local, instantaneous release of a mixture of saturated cyclic hydrocarbons (titrants) and perfluorocarbons (dispersants). These species must not normally be present in ambient air above the part per trillion concentration. We then track the mixture downwind using a real-time portable ECD tracer instrument. We collect air samples in canisters every few minutes for roughly one hour. We then return to the laboratory and analyze our air samples to determine the ratios of the titrant to dispersant concentrations. The trends in these ratios give us the ambient OH concentration from the relation: dlnR/dt = -k(OH). A successful measurement of OH requires that the trends in these ratios be measureable. We must not perturb ambient OH concentrations. The titrant to dispersant ratio must be spatially invariant. Finally, heterogeneous reactions of our titrant and dispersant species must be negligible relative to the titrant reaction with OH. We have conducted laboratory studies of our ability to measure the titrant to dispersant ratios as a function of concentration down to the few part per trillion concentration. We have subsequently used these results in a gaussian puff model to estimate our expected uncertainty in a field measurement of OH. Our results indicate that under a range of atmospheric conditions we expect to be able to measure OH with a sensitivity of 3x10(exp 5) cm(exp -3). In our most optimistic scenarios, we obtain a sensitivity of 1x10(exp 5) cm(exp -3). These sensitivity values reflect our anticipated ability to measure the ratio trends. However, because we are also using a rate constant to obtain our (OH) from this ratio trend, our accuracy cannot be better than that of the rate constant, which we expect to be about 20 percent.
    Keywords: ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
    Type: SRI International Corp., Local Measurement of Tropospheric HO(x); 1 p
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The National Research Council's Space Studies Board has previously recommended that the next major phase of Mars exploration for the United States involve detailed in situ investigations of the surface of Mars and the return to earth for laboratory analysis of selected Martian surface samples. More recently, the European space science community has expressed general interest in the concept of cooperative Mars exploration and sample return. The USSR has now announced plans for a program of Mars exploration incorporating international cooperation. If the opportunity becomes available to participate in Mars exploration, interest is likely to emerge on the part of a number of other countries, such as Japan and Canada. The Space Studies Board's Committee on Cooperative Mars Exploration and Sample Return was asked by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to examine and report on the question of how Mars sample return missions might best be structured for effective implementation by NASA along with international partners. The committee examined alternatives ranging from scientific missions in which the United States would take a substantial lead, with international participation playing only an ancillary role, to missions in which international cooperation would be a basic part of the approach, with the international partners taking on comparably large mission responsibilities. On the basis of scientific strategies developed earlier by the Space Studies Board, the committee considered the scientific and technical basis of such collaboration and the most mutually beneficial arrangements for constructing successful cooperative missions, particularly with the USSR.
    Keywords: ASTRONAUTICS (GENERAL)
    Type: NASA-CR-186511 , NAS 1.26:186511
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  • 6
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    Unknown
    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2014-09-24
    Description: Recent research has solidified a view of the Earth as a global scale interactive system with complex chemical, physical, biological, and dynamical processes that link the ocean, atmosphere, land, and marine terrestrial living organisms. An important aspect of Earth System Science studies in the future is the need to observe simultaneously the physical, chemical, biological, and dynamical processes involved in highly coupled phenomena such as those mentioned. Lidars operating from the surface, aircraft, and satellites provide a powerful observational technique to study the processes and observe trends important to global change. Lidar observations have already played important roles in helping understand processes controlling stratospheric ozone and aerosols, tropospheric clouds, water vapor, ozone, gaseous pollutants, and aerosols, and winds and temperatures throughout the atmosphere. In this paper the author reviews the science of global change and highlights the potential roles for lidar in studying the Earth system.
    Keywords: ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
    Type: NASA. Langley Research Center, Sixteenth International Laser Radar Conference, Part 1; p 21-22
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: This final report contains a list of publications supported in whole or part by NAG9-108 in the time period 1 May 1985 to 30 April 1994. Also contained is a list of invited papers with abstracts supported in whole or part by this grant in the same time period. A copy of the 1993 paper by Ronald G. Prinn, 'Protostars and Planets III', is attached since it had not previously been sent to NASA.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: NASA-CR-195691 , NAS 1.26:195691
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: A 3D model which encompasses SO2 production from OCS, followed by its oxidation to gaseous H2SO4, the condensation-evaporation equilibrium of gaseous and particulate H2SO4, and finally particle condensation and rainout, is presently used to study processes maintaining the nonvolcanically-perturbed stratosphere's sulfuric acid layer. A comparison of the results thus obtained with remotely sensed stratospheric aerosol extinction data shows the model to simulate the general behavior of stratospheric aerosol extinction.
    Keywords: ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
    Type: Journal of Atmospheric Chemistry (ISSN 0167-7764); 16; 2; p. 179-199.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: The latest version of the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) community climate model (CCM2) contains a semi-Lagrangian tracer transport scheme for the purpose of advecting water vapor and for including chemistry in the climate model. One way to diagnose the CCM2 transport is to simulate CFCl3 in the CCM2 since it has a well-known industry-based source distribution and a photochemical sink and to compare the model results to Atmospheric Lifetime Experiment/Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment ALE/GAGE observations around the globe. In this paper we focus on this comparison and discuss the synoptic scale issues of tracer transport where appropriate. We compare the model and observations on both 12-hour and monthly timescales. The higher-frequency events allow us to diagnose the synoptic scale transport in the CCM2 associated with the observational sites and to determine uncertainties in our high-resolution source distribution. We find that the CCM2 does simulate many of the key features such as pollution events and some seasonal transports, but there are still some dynamical features of tracer transport such as the storm track dynamics and cross-equatorial flow that merit further study in both the model and the real atmosphere.
    Keywords: ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION
    Type: Journal of Geophysical Research (ISSN 0148-0227); 99; D6; p. 12,885-12,896
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  • 10
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    Unknown
    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: An investigation of the chemical and physical processes which determine the composition and evolution of gas-rich circumstellar disks is reported. Strong mixing in a thermoclinic environment like an accretion disk leads to thermochemical disequilibration due to 'kinetic inhibition' induced by chemical time constants becoming longer than outward mixing time constants. In this case, species thermodynamically stable at high temperatures but not at low temperatures dominate at all temperatures in the disk. Nonaxisymmetric accretion of material at hypersonic speeds is a major forcing mechanism for mixing in the disk and can produce eddy speeds of 1 percent of the sound speed. The implications kinetic inhibition in the carbon, nitrogen, and anhydrous/hydrous silicate families has for the compositions of the terrestrial planets, giant planets, ice-rich satellites, Pluto, comets, meteorites, and asteroids are discussed.
    Keywords: ASTROPHYSICS
    Type: In: Protostars and planets III (A93-42937 17-90); p. 1005-1028.
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