Andreas Weigelt
Leibniz Association
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Featured researches published by Andreas Weigelt.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016
Francesca Sprovieri; Nicola Pirrone; Mariantonia Bencardino; Francesco D'Amore; Francesco Carbone; Sergio Cinnirella; Valentino Mannarino; Matthew S. Landis; Ralf Ebinghaus; Andreas Weigelt; E.-G. Brunke; Casper Labuschagne; Lynwill Martin; John Munthe; Ingvar Wängberg; Paulo Artaxo; Fernando Morais; Henrique M. J. Barbosa; Joel Brito; Warren Raymond Lee Cairns; Carlo Barbante; María del Carmen Diéguez; Patricia Elizabeth Garcia; Aurélien Dommergue; Hélène Angot; Olivier Magand; Henrik Skov; Milena Horvat; Jože Kotnik; K. A. Read
Long-term monitoring of data of ambient mercury (Hg) on a global scale to assess its emission, transport, atmospheric chemistry, and deposition processes is vital to understanding the impact of Hg pollution on the environment. The Global Mercury Observation System (GMOS) project was funded by the European Commission (http://www.gmos.eu) and started in November 2010 with the overall goal to develop a coordinated global observing system to monitor Hg on a global scale, including a large network of ground-based monitoring stations, ad hoc periodic oceanographic cruises and measurement flights in the lower and upper troposphere as well as in the lower stratosphere. To date, more than 40 ground-based monitoring sites constitute the global network covering many regions where little to no observational data were available before GMOS. This work presents atmospheric Hg concentrations recorded worldwide in the framework of the GMOS project (2010-2015), analyzing Hg measurement results in terms of temporal trends, seasonality and comparability within the network. Major findings highlighted in this paper include a clear gradient of Hg concentrations between the Northern and Southern hemispheres, confirming that the gradient observed is mostly driven by local and regional sources, which can be anthropogenic, natural or a combination of both.
Environmental Chemistry | 2013
Andreas Weigelt; Christian Temme; Elke Bieber; Andreas Schwerin; Maik Schuetze; Ralf Ebinghaus; H. H. Kock
Environmental context Mercury is a very hazardous substance for human and environmental health. Systematic long-term direct measurements in the atmosphere can provide valuable information about the effect of emission controls on the global budget of atmospheric mercury, and offer insight into source–receptor transboundary transport of mercury. A complete setup for the measurement of the four most relevant atmospheric mercury species (total gaseous mercury, gaseous oxidised mercury, particle-bound mercury, and gaseous elemental mercury) has been operating at the rural background site of Waldhof, Germany, since 2009. We present the dataset for 2009–2011, the first full-speciation time series for atmospheric mercury reported in Central Europe. Abstract Measurements of mercury species started in 2009 at the air pollution monitoring site ‘Waldhof’ of the German Federal Environmental Agency. Waldhof (52°48′N, 10°45′E) is a rural background site located in the northern German lowlands in a flat terrain, 100km south-east of Hamburg. The temporally highly resolved measurements of total gaseous mercury (TGM), gaseous oxidised mercury (GOM), particle-bound mercury (PBMPM2.5, with particulate matter of a diameter of ≤2.5µm) and gaseous elemental mercury (GEM) cover the period from 2009 to 2011. The complete measurement procedure turned out to be well applicable to detect GOM and PBMPM2.5 levels in the range of 0.4 to 65pgm–3. As the linearity of the analyser was proven to be constant over orders of magnitude, even larger concentrations can be measured accurately. The 3-year median concentration of GEM is found to be 1.61ngm–3, representing typical northern hemispheric background concentrations. With 6.3pgm–3, the 3-year average concentration of PBMPM2.5 is found to be approximately six times higher than the 3-year average GOM concentration. During winter the PBMPM2.5 concentration is on average twice as high as the PBMPM2.5 summer concentration, whereas the GOM concentration shows no clear seasonality. However, on a comparatively low level, a significant diurnal cycle is shown for GOM concentrations. This cycle is most likely related to photochemical oxidation mechanisms. Comparison with selected North American long-term mercury speciation datasets shows that the Waldhof 3-year median speciated mercury data represent typical rural background values.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009
Andreas Weigelt; M. Hermann; P. F. J. van Velthoven; Carl A. M. Brenninkmeijer; G. Schlaf; A. Zahn; A. Wiedensohler
Atmospheric Chemistry Dep., Max Planck Institute for Chemistry, 55128, Mainz, Germany Keywords: aerosol-cloud interaction, particle formation From 1997 to 2001, 47 flights between Colombo (Sri Lanka) or Male (Maldives) and Germany were conducted as part of the CARIBIC project (Civil Aircraft for Regular Investigation of the Atmosphere Based on an Instrumentation Container, Brenninkmeijer et al., 1999, http://www.caribic- atmospheric.com). During these flights several trace gas and aerosol parameters were measured. Aerosol number concentrations for three different size ranges were obtained using three condensation particle counters (CPCs), i.e., ultrafine particles (4 to 12 nm, N
Tellus B | 2011
Jost Heintzenberg; Markus Hermann; Andreas Weigelt; Antony D. Clarke; Vladimir N. Kapustin; Bruce E. Anderson; K. L. Thornhill; Peter F. J. van Velthoven; A. Zahn; Carl A. M. Brenninkmeijer
This study extrapolates aerosol data of the CARIBIC project from 1997 until June 2008 in along trajectories to compose large-scale maps and vertical profiles of submicrometre particle concentrations in the upper troposphere and lowermost stratosphere (UT/LMS). The extrapolation was validated by comparing extrapolated values with CARIBIC data measured near the respective trajectory position and by comparing extrapolated CARIBIC data to measurements by other experiments near the respective trajectory positions. Best agreement between extrapolated and measured data is achieved with particle lifetimes longer than the maximum length of used trajectories. The derived maps reveal regions of strong and frequent new particle formation, namely the Tropical Central and Western Africa with the adjacent Atlantic, South America, the Caribbean and Southeast Asia. These regions of particle formation coincide with those of frequent deep convective clouds. Vertical particle concentration profiles for the troposphere and the stratosphere confirm statistically previous results indicating frequent new particle formation in the tropopause region. There was no statistically significant increase in Aitken mode particle concentration between the first period of CARIBIC operation, 1997–2002, and the second period, 2004–2009. However, a significant increase in concentration occurred within the latter period when considering it in isolation.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2016
F. Slemr; Carl A. M. Brenninkmeijer; Armin Rauthe-Schöch; Andreas Weigelt; Ralf Ebinghaus; Ernst-Guenther Brunke; Lynwill Martin; T. Gerard Spain; Simon O'Doherty
The El Nino–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) affects the tropospheric concentrations of many trace gases. Here we investigate the ENSO influence on mercury concentrations measured in the upper troposphere during Civil Aircraft for the Regular Investigation of the atmosphere Based on an Instrumented Container flights and at ground at Cape Point, South Africa, and Mace Head, Ireland. Mercury concentrations cross-correlate with Southern Oscillation Index (SOI) with a lag of 8 ± 2 months. Highest mercury concentrations are always found at the most negative SOI values, i.e., 8 months after El Nino, and the amplitude of the interannual variations fluctuates between ~5 and 18%. The time lag is similar to that of CO whose interannual variations are driven largely by emissions from biomass burning (BB). The amplitude of the interannual variability of tropospheric mercury concentrations is consistent with the estimated variations in mercury emissions from BB. We thus conclude that BB is a major factor driving the interannual variation of tropospheric mercury concentrations.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011
Armin Rauthe-Schöch; Andreas Weigelt; M. Hermann; Bengt G. Martinsson; A. K. Baker; Klaus-Peter Heue; Carl A. M. Brenninkmeijer; A. Zahn; D. Scharffe; Sabine Eckhardt; Andreas Stohl; P. F. J. van Velthoven
The Civil Aircraft for the Regular Investigation of the Atmosphere Based on an Instrument Container (CARIBIC) project investigates physical and chemical processes in the Earth’s atmosphere using a Lufthansa Airbus long-distance passenger aircraft. After the beginning of the explosive eruption of the Eyjafjallaj ökull volcano on Iceland on 14 April 2010, the first CARIBIC volcano-specific measurement flight was carried out over the Baltic Sea and Southern Sweden on 20 April. Two more flights followed: one over Ireland and the Irish Sea on 16 May and the other over the Norwegian Sea on 19 May 2010. During these three special mission flights the CARIBIC container proved its merits as a comprehensive flying laboratory. The elemental composition of particles collected over the Baltic Sea during the first flight (20 April) indicated the presence of volcanic ash. Over Northern Ireland and the Irish Sea (16 May), the DOAS system detected SO 2 and BrO co-located with volcanic ash particles that increased the aerosol optical depth. Over the Norwegian Sea (19 May), the optical particle counter detected a strong increase of particles larger than 400 nm diameter in a region where ash clouds were predicted by aerosol dispersion models. Aerosol particle samples collected over the Irish Sea and the Norwegian Sea showed large relative enhancements of the elements silicon, iron, titanium and calcium. Non-methane hydrocarbon concentrations in whole air samples collected on 16 and 19 May 2010 showed a pattern of removal of several hydrocarbons that is typical for chlorine chemistry in the volcanic clouds. Comparisons of measured ash concentrations and simulations with the FLEXPART dispersion model demonstrate the difficulty of detailed volcanic ash dispersion modelling due to the large variability of the volcanic cloud sources, extent and patchiness as well as the thin ash layers formed in the volcanic clouds.
Archive | 2016
Johannes Bieser; Volker Matthias; Oleg Travnikov; Ian M. Hedgecock; Christian N. Gencarelli; Francesco De Simone; Andreas Weigelt; Jialei Zhu
This model study about the influence of chemical reactants on the transport of mercury is part of an international mercury model inter-comparison (MMTF) coordinated by the EU-FP7 Research Project GMOS (Global Mercury Observation System). GMOS focuses on the improvement and validation of mercury models to assist establishing a global monitoring network and to support the implementation of the Minamata Convention. For the model inter-comparison, several global and regional Chemistry Transport Models (CTM) were used to simulate the influence of reactants on mercury oxidation. For this, gas and aqueous phase reactions of mercury with bromine were implemented into the models. As reactants, precalculated bromine concentrations were taken from the global bromine models P-TOMCAT and GEOS-CHEM. The modelled concentrations of oxidized mercury were compared to observations from GMOS measurement stations, and air craft campaigns. It was found that, even outside of polar regions, bromine plays an important role in the oxidation of mercury. Moreover, the chosen reactant influenced the vertical distribution of mercury in the atmosphere. While little difference was found for GOM concentrations at the surface level, the bromine reaction was able to explain the elevated concentration of GOM observed in the free troposphere.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015
Shaoije Song; Noelle E. Selin; Anne L. Soerensen; Hélène Angot; Richard Artz; Steven Brooks; Ernst Günther Brunke; Gary Conley; Aurélien Dommergue; Ralf Ebinghaus; Thomas M. Holsen; Daniel A. Jaffe; Shichang Kang; Paul Kelley; Winston T. Luke; Olivier Magand; Kohji Marumoto; Katrine Aspmo Pfaffhuber; Xinrong Ren; Guey-Rong Sheu; F. Slemr; Thorsten Warneke; Andreas Weigelt; Peter Weiss-Penzias; Dennis Wip; Qianggong Zhang
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2014
F. Slemr; Hélène Angot; Aurélien Dommergue; Olivier Magand; Manuel Barret; Andreas Weigelt; Ralf Ebinghaus; Ernst Günther Brunke; Katrine Aspmo Pfaffhuber; Grant C. Edwards; Dean Howard; James Powell; Melita Keywood; Feiyue Wang
Atmosphere | 2014
F. Slemr; Andreas Weigelt; Ralf Ebinghaus; Carl A. M. Brenninkmeijer; A. K. Baker; Tanja J. Schuck; Armin Rauthe-Schöch; Hella Riede; E. Leedham; Markus Hermann; Peter F. J. van Velthoven; D. E. Oram; D. A. O'Sullivan; Christoph Dyroff; A. Zahn; H. Ziereis