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Dive into the research topics where Andreas J. Beyersdorf is active.

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Featured researches published by Andreas J. Beyersdorf.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Airborne Measurements of Western U.S. Wildfire Emissions: Comparison with Prescribed Burning and Air Quality Implications

Xiaoxi Liu; L. Gregory Huey; Robert J. Yokelson; Vanessa Selimovic; Isobel J. Simpson; Markus Müller; Jose L. Jimenez; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; D. R. Blake; Zachary Butterfield; Yonghoon Choi; John D. Crounse; Douglas A. Day; Glenn S. Diskin; Manvendra K. Dubey; Edward Charles Fortner; T. F. Hanisco; Weiwei Hu; Laura E. King; Lawrence I. Kleinman; Simone Meinardi; Tomas Mikoviny; Timothy B. Onasch; Brett B. Palm; J. Peischl; Ilana B. Pollack; Thomas B. Ryerson; Glen W. Sachse; Arthur J. Sedlacek

Wildfires emit significant amounts of pollutants that degrade air quality. Plumes from three wildfires in the western U.S. were measured from aircraft during the Studies of Emissions and Atmospheric Composition, Clouds and Climate Coupling by Regional Surveys (SEAC^4RS) and the Biomass Burning Observation Project (BBOP), both in summer 2013. This study reports an extensive set of emission factors (EFs) for over 80 gases and 5 components of submicron particulate matter (PM_1) from these temperate wildfires. These include rarely, or never before, measured oxygenated volatile organic compounds and multifunctional organic nitrates. The observed EFs are compared with previous measurements of temperate wildfires, boreal forest fires, and temperate prescribed fires. The wildfires emitted high amounts of PM_1 (with organic aerosol (OA) dominating the mass) with an average EF that is more than 2 times the EFs for prescribed fires. The measured EFs were used to estimate the annual wildfire emissions of carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, total nonmethane organic compounds, and PM_1 from 11 western U.S. states. The estimated gas emissions are generally comparable with the 2011 National Emissions Inventory (NEI). However, our PM_1 emission estimate (1530 ± 570 Gg yr^(−1)) is over 3 times that of the NEI PM_(2.5) estimate and is also higher than the PM_(2.5) emitted from all other sources in these states in the NEI. This study indicates that the source of OA from biomass burning in the western states is significantly underestimated. In addition, our results indicate that prescribed burning may be an effective method to reduce fine particle emissions.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Ambient observations of hygroscopic growth factor and f(RH) below 1: Case studies from surface and airborne measurements†

Taylor Shingler; Armin Sorooshian; Amber M. Ortega; Ewan Crosbie; Anna Wonaschütz; A. E. Perring; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; Luke D. Ziemba; Jose L. Jimenez; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; Tomas Mikoviny; Armin Wisthaler; Lynn M. Russell

This study reports on the first set of ambient observations of sub-1.0 hygroscopicity values (i.e., growth factor, ratio of humidified-to-dry diameter, GF=D p,wet /D p,dry and f(RH), ratio of humidified-to-dry scattering coefficients, less than 1) with consistency across different instruments, regions, and platforms. We utilized data from (i) a shipboard humidified tandem differential mobility analyzer (HTDMA) during Eastern Pacific Emitted Aerosol Cloud Experiment (E-PEACE) in 2011, (ii) multiple instruments on the DC-8 aircraft during Studies of Emissions, Atmospheric Composition, Clouds and Climate Coupling by Regional Surveys (SEAC4RS) in 2013, as well as (iii) the Differential Aerosol Sizing and Hygroscopicity Spectrometer Probe (DASH-SP) during measurement intensives during Summer 2014 and Winter 2015 in Tucson, Arizona. Sub-1.0 GFs were observed across the range of relative humidity (RH) investigated (75-95%), and did not show a RH-dependent trend in value below 1.0 or frequency of occurrence. A commonality between suppressed hygroscopicity in these experiments, including sub-1.0 GF, was the presence of smoke. Evidence of externally mixed aerosol, and thus multiple GFs, was observed during smoke periods resulting in at least one mode with GF < 1. Time periods during which the DASH-SP detected externally mixed aerosol coincide with sub-1.0 f(RH) observations. Mechanisms responsible for sub-1.0 hygroscopicity are discussed and include refractive index (RI) modifications due to aqueous processing, particle restructuring, and volatilization effects. To further investigate ambient observations of sub-1.0 GFs, f(RH), and particle restructuring, modifying hygroscopicity instruments with pre-humidification modules is recommended.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Modeling NH4NO3 Over the San Joaquin Valley During the 2013 DISCOVER‐AQ Campaign

James T. Kelly; Caroline L. Parworth; Qi Zhang; David J. Miller; Kang Sun; Mark A. Zondlo; Kirk R. Baker; Armin Wisthaler; J. B. Nowak; S. E. Pusede; R. C. Cohen; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; Gail Tonnesen; Jesse O. Bash; L. C. Valin; J. H. Crawford; Alan Fried; James G. Walega

The San Joaquin Valley (SJV) of California experiences high concentrations of particulate matter NH4NO3 during episodes of meteorological stagnation in winter. A rich data set of observations related to NH4NO3 formation was acquired during multiple periods of elevated NH4NO3 during the Deriving Information on Surface Conditions from Column and Vertically Resolved Observations Relevant to Air Quality (DISCOVER-AQ) field campaign in SJV in January and February 2013. Here NH4NO3 is simulated during the SJV DISCOVER-AQ study period with the Community Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model, diagnostic model evaluation is performed using the DISCOVER-AQ data set, and integrated reaction rate analysis is used to quantify HNO3 production rates. Simulated NO3- generally agrees well with routine monitoring of 24-hr average NO3-, but comparisons with hourly average NO3- measurements in Fresno revealed differences at higher time resolution. Predictions of gas-particle partitioning of total nitrate (HNO3 + NO3-) and NHx (NH3 + NH4+) generally agree well with measurements in Fresno, although partitioning of total nitrate to HNO3 is sometimes overestimated at low relative humidity in afternoon. Gas-particle partitioning results indicate that NH4NO3 formation is limited by HNO3 availability in both the model and ambient. NH3 mixing ratios are underestimated, particularly in areas with large agricultural activity, and additional work on the spatial allocation of NH3 emissions is warranted. During a period of elevated NH4NO3, the model predicted that the OH + NO2 pathway contributed 46% to total HNO3production in SJV and the N2O5 heterogeneous hydrolysis pathway contributed 54%. The relative importance of the OH + NO2 pathway for HNO3 production is predicted to increase as NOx emissions decrease.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2012

Analysis of CCN activity of Arctic aerosol and Canadian biomass burning during summer 2008

T. L. Lathem; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; K. L. Thornhill; Edward L. Winstead; Michael J. Cubison; Arsineh Hecobian; Jose L. Jimenez; Rodney J. Weber; Bruce E. Anderson; Athanasios Nenes


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015

In situ vertical profiles of aerosol extinction, mass, and composition over the southeast United States during SENEX and SEAC 4 RS: observations of a modest aerosol enhancement aloft

Nicholas L. Wagner; C. A. Brock; Wayne M. Angevine; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; Douglas A. Day; J. A. de Gouw; Glenn S. Diskin; Timothy D. Gordon; Martin Graus; John S. Holloway; Greg Huey; Jose L. Jimenez; D. A. Lack; Jin Liao; Xiaoxi Liu; Milos Z. Markovic; Ann M. Middlebrook; Tomas Mikoviny; J. Peischl; A. E. Perring; Mathews S. Richardson; T. B. Ryerson; J. P. Schwarz; Carsten Warneke; André Welti; Armin Wisthaler; Luke D. Ziemba; D. M. Murphy


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

In situ measurements and modeling of reactive trace gases in a small biomass burning plume

Markus Müller; Bruce E. Anderson; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; J. H. Crawford; Glenn S. Diskin; Philipp Eichler; Alan Fried; Frank N. Keutsch; Tomas Mikoviny; K. L. Thornhill; James G. Walega; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Melissa Yang; Robert J. Yokelson; Armin Wisthaler


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

HSRL-2 aerosol optical measurements and microphysical retrievals vs. airborne in situ measurements during DISCOVER-AQ 2013: an intercomparison study

Patricia Sawamura; Richard Moore; Sharon Burton; Eduard Chemyakin; Detlef Müller; Alexei Kolgotin; Richard A. Ferrare; Chris A. Hostetler; Luke D. Ziemba; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; Bruce E. Anderson


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

Observational assessment of the role of nocturnal residual-layer chemistry in determining daytime surface particulate nitrate concentrations

Gouri Prabhakar; Caroline Parworth; Xiaolu Zhang; Hwajin Kim; Dominique E. Young; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; Luke D. Ziemba; J. B. Nowak; Timothy H. Bertram; Ian C. Faloona; Qi Zhang; Christopher D. Cappa


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2016

Retrievals of Aerosol Optical and Microphysical Properties from Imaging Polar Nephelometer Scattering Measurements

W. Reed Espinosa; Lorraine A. Remer; Oleg Dubovik; Luke D. Ziemba; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; F. Daniel Orozco; Gregory L. Schuster; T. Lapyonok; David Fuertes; J. Vanderlei Martins


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2015

Spectral Aerosol Extinction (SpEx): A New Instrument for In situ Ambient Aerosol Extinction Measurements Across the UV/Visible Wavelength Range

C. E. Jordan; Bruce E. Anderson; Andreas J. Beyersdorf; Chelsea A. Corr; Jack E. Dibb; Margaret E. Greenslade; Robert Martin; Richard Moore; Eric Scheuer; Michael Shook; K. L. Thornhill; D. Troop; Edward L. Winstead; Luke D. Ziemba

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Jose L. Jimenez

University of Colorado Boulder

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Pedro Campuzano-Jost

University of Colorado Boulder

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Douglas A. Day

University of Colorado Boulder

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