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Dive into the research topics where F. L. Moore is active.

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Featured researches published by F. L. Moore.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2002

Chemical depletion of Arctic ozone in winter 1999/2000

M. Rex; R. J. Salawitch; N. R. P. Harris; P. von der Gathen; G. O. Braathen; Astrid Schulz; H. Deckelmann; M. P. Chipperfield; Björn-Martin Sinnhuber; E. Reimer; R. Alfier; Richard M. Bevilacqua; K. W. Hoppel; M. Fromm; J. Lumpe; H. Küllmann; Armin Kleinböhl; H. Bremer; M. von König; K. Künzi; D. W. Toohey; H. Vömel; Erik Charles Richard; K. C. Aikin; H. Jost; Jeffery B. Greenblatt; M. Loewenstein; J. R. Podolske; C. R. Webster; G. J. Flesch

During Arctic winters with a cold, stable stratospheric circulation, reactions on the surface of polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs) lead to elevated abundances of chlorine monoxide (ClO) that, in the presence of sunlight, destroy ozone. Here we show that PSCs were more widespread during the 1999/2000 Arctic winter than for any other Arctic winter in the past two decades. We have used three fundamentally different approaches to derive the degree of chemical ozone loss from ozonesonde, balloon, aircraft, and satellite instruments. We show that the ozone losses derived from these different instruments and approaches agree very well, resulting in a high level of confidence in the results. Chemical processes led to a 70% reduction of ozone for a region ∼1 km thick of the lower stratosphere, the largest degree of local loss ever reported for the Arctic. The Match analysis of ozonesonde data shows that the accumulated chemical loss of ozone inside the Arctic vortex totaled 117 ± 14 Dobson units (DU) by the end of winter. This loss, combined with dynamical redistribution of air parcels, resulted in a 88 ± 13 DU reduction in total column ozone compared to the amount that would have been present in the absence of any chemical loss. The chemical loss of ozone throughout the winter was nearly balanced by dynamical resupply of ozone to the vortex, resulting in a relatively constant value of total ozone of 340 ± 50 DU between early January and late March. This observation of nearly constant total ozone in the Arctic vortex is in contrast to the increase of total column ozone between January and March that is observed during most years.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2001

Severe chemical ozone loss inside the Arctic Polar Vortex during winter 1999–2000 Inferred from in situ airborne measurements

E. C. Richard; K. C. Aikin; A. E. Andrews; Bruce C. Daube; Christoph Gerbig; S. C. Wofsy; P. A. Romashkin; D. F. Hurst; Eric A. Ray; F. L. Moore; James W. Elkins; Terry Deshler; Geoffrey C. Toon

Lower stratospheric in situ observations are used to quantify both the accumulated ozone loss and the ozone chemical loss rates in the Arctic polar vortex during the 1999–2000 winter. Multiple long-lived trace gas correlations are used to identify parcels in the inner Arctic vortex whose chemical loss rates are unaffected by extra-vortex intrusions. Ozone-tracer correlations are then used to calculate ozone chemical loss rates. During the late winter the ozone chemical loss rate is found to be −46±6 (1σ) ppbv/day. By mid-March 2000, the accumulated ozone chemical loss is 58±4% in the lower stratosphere near 450 K potential temperature (∼19 km altitude).


Geophysical Research Letters | 2013

Global‐scale seasonally resolved black carbon vertical profiles over the Pacific

Joshua P. Schwarz; Bjørn H. Samset; A. E. Perring; J. R. Spackman; R. S. Gao; P. Stier; Michael Schulz; F. L. Moore; Eric A. Ray; D. W. Fahey

[1] Black carbon (BC) aerosol loadings were measured during the High-performance Instrumented Airborne Platform for Environmental Research Pole-to-Pole Observations (HIPPO) campaign above the remote Pacific from 85°N to 67°S. Over 700 vertical profiles extending from near the surface to max ∼14 km altitude were obtained with a single-particle soot photometer between early 2009 and mid-2011. The data provides a climatology of BC in the remote regions that reveals gradients of BC concentration reflecting global-scale transport and removal of pollution. BC is identified as a sensitive tracer of extratropical mixing into the lower tropical tropopause layer and trends toward surprisingly uniform loadings in the lower stratosphere of ∼1 ng/kg. The climatology is compared to predictions from the AeroCom global model intercomparison initiative. The AeroCom model suite overestimates loads in the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere (∼10×) more severely than at lower altitudes (∼3×), with bias roughly independent of season or geographic location; these results indicate that it overestimates BC lifetime.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 1999

Closure of the total hydrogen budget of the northern extratropical lower stratosphere

D. F. Hurst; Geoff Dutton; P. A. Romashkin; P. R. Wamsley; F. L. Moore; J. W. Elkins; E. J. Hintsa; Elliot M. Weinstock; Robert Herman; Elisabeth J. Moyer; D. C. Scott; R. D. May; C. R. Webster

Methane (CH4), molecular hydrogen (H2), and water vapor (H2O) were measured concurrently on board the NASA ER-2 aircraft during the 1995–1996 Stratospheric Tracers of Atmospheric Transport (STRAT) and 1997 Photochemistry of Ozone Loss in the Arctic Region in Summer (POLARIS) campaigns. Correlations between these three main hydrogen reservoirs in the northern extratropical lower stratosphere are examined to evaluate H2O production from CH4 and H2 oxidation. The expected ratio of stratospheric H2O production (PH2O)to CH4 destruction (LCH4) = −1.973±0.003 is calculated from an evaluation of CH4 and H2 oxidation reactions and the relationship between H2 and CH4 mixing ratios measured during STRAT. Correlations between H2O and CH4 were tight and linear only for air masses with mean ages ≥3.8 years, restricting this analysis predominantly to latitudes between 40° and 90°N and potential temperatures between 470 and 540 K. The mean observed ΔH2O/CH4 (−2.15±0.18) is in statistical agreement with the expected PH2O/LCH4. The annual mean stratospheric entry mixing ratio for H2O calculated from this slope is 4.0 ± 0.3 ppm. The quantity H2O + 2·CH4 is quasi-conserved at 7.4 ± 0.5 ppm in older air masses in the northern extratropical lower stratosphere. Significant departure of H2O + 2·CH4 from the mean value is a sensitive indicator of processes which influence H2O without affecting CH4, such as dehydration in a polar vortex or near the tropical tropopause. No significant trend is observed in ER-2 aircraft data for H2O + 2·CH4 in the lower stratosphere from 1993 through 1997.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2001

In Situ Measurements of Long-Lived Trace Gases in the Lower Stratosphere by Gas Chromatography

P. A. Romashkin; D. F. Hurst; J. W. Elkins; Geoff Dutton; D. W. Fahey; R. E. Dunn; F. L. Moore; R. C. Myers; B. D. Hall

Abstract Detailed information on the four-channel Airborne Chromatograph for Atmospheric Trace Species (ACATS-IV), used to measure long-lived atmospheric trace gases, is presented. Since ACATS-IV was last described in the literature, the temporal resolution of some measurements was tripled during 1997–99, chromatography was significantly changed, and data processing improved. ACATS-IV presently measures CCl3F [chlorofluorocarbon (CFC)-11], CCl2FCClF2 (CFC-113), CH3CCl3 (methyl chloroform), CCl4 (carbon tetrachloride), CH4 (methane), H2 (hydrogen), and CHCl3 (chloroform) every 140 s, and N2O (nitrous oxide), CCl2F2 (CFC-12), CBrClF2 (halon-1211), and SF6 (sulfur hexafluoride) every 70 s. An in-depth description of the instrument operation, standardization, calibration, and data processing is provided, along with a discussion of precision and uncertainties of ambient air measurements for several airborne missions.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2014

Improving stratospheric transport trend analysis based on SF6 and CO2 measurements

Eric A. Ray; F. L. Moore; Karen H. Rosenlof; Sean M. Davis; Colm Sweeney; Pieter P. Tans; T. Wang; J. W. Elkins; Harald Bönisch; Andreas Engel; Satoshi Sugawara; Takakiyo Nakazawa; S. Aoki

In this study we reexamine nearly four decades of in situ balloon-based stratospheric observations of SF6 and CO2 with an idealized model and reanalysis products. We use new techniques to account for the spatial and temporal inhomogeneity of the sparse balloon profiles and to calculate stratospheric mean ages of air more consistently from the observations with the idealized model. By doing so we are able to more clearly show and account for the variability of mean age of air throughout the bulk of the depth of the stratosphere. From an idealized model guided by the observations, we identify variability in the mean age due to the seasonal cycle of stratospheric transport, the quasi-biennial oscillation in tropical zonal winds, major volcanic eruptions, and linear trends that vary significantly with altitude. We calculate a negative mean age trend in the lowest 5 km of the stratosphere that agrees within uncertainties with a trend calculated from a set of chemistry climate model mean ages in this layer. The mean age trends reverse sign in the middle and upper stratosphere and are in agreement with a previous positive trend estimate using the same observational data set, although we have substantially reduced the uncertainty on the trend. Our analysis shows that a long time series of in situ profile measurements of trace gases such as SF6 and CO2 can be a unique and useful indicator of stratospheric circulation variability on a range of time scales and an important contributor to help validate the stratospheric portion of global chemistry climate models. However, with only SF6 and CO2 measurements, the competing effects on mean age between mean circulation and mixing (tropical entrainment) are not uniquely separable.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2014

Global emissions of refrigerants HCFC-22 and HFC-134a: unforeseen seasonal contributions.

B. Xiang; Prabir K. Patra; Stephen A. Montzka; Scot M. Miller; J. W. Elkins; F. L. Moore; Elliot Atlas; Benjamin R. Miller; Ray F. Weiss; Ronald G. Prinn; S. C. Wofsy

Significance HCFC-22 (CHClF2) and HFC-134a (CH2FCF3) are two major gases currently used worldwide in domestic and commercial refrigeration and air conditioning. HCFC-22 contributes to stratospheric ozone depletion, and both species are potent greenhouse gases. We find pronounced seasonal variations of global emissions for these two major refrigerants, with summer emissions two to three times higher than in winter. Thus results suggest that global emissions of these potent greenhouse gases might be mitigated by improved design and engineering of refrigeration systems and/or by reinforcing system service regulations. HCFC-22 (CHClF2) and HFC-134a (CH2FCF3) are two major gases currently used worldwide in domestic and commercial refrigeration and air conditioning. HCFC-22 contributes to stratospheric ozone depletion, and both species are potent greenhouse gases. In this work, we study in situ observations of HCFC-22 and HFC-134a taken from research aircraft over the Pacific Ocean in a 3-y span [HIaper-Pole-to-Pole Observations (HIPPO) 2009–2011] and combine these data with long-term ground observations from global surface sites [National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and Advanced Global Atmospheric Gases Experiment (AGAGE) networks]. We find the global annual emissions of HCFC-22 and HFC-134a have increased substantially over the past two decades. Emissions of HFC-134a are consistently higher compared with the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) inventory since 2000, by 60% more in recent years (2009–2012). Apart from these decadal emission constraints, we also quantify recent seasonal emission patterns showing that summertime emissions of HCFC-22 and HFC-134a are two to three times higher than wintertime emissions. This unforeseen large seasonal variation indicates that unaccounted mechanisms controlling refrigerant gas emissions are missing in the existing inventory estimates. Possible mechanisms enhancing refrigerant losses in summer are (i) higher vapor pressure in the sealed compartment of the system at summer high temperatures and (ii) more frequent use and service of refrigerators and air conditioners in summer months. Our results suggest that engineering (e.g., better temperature/vibration-resistant system sealing and new system design of more compact/efficient components) and regulatory (e.g., reinforcing system service regulations) steps to improve containment of these gases from working devices could effectively reduce their release to the atmosphere.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Quantification of the SF6 lifetime based on mesospheric loss measured in the stratospheric polar vortex

Eric A. Ray; F. L. Moore; J. W. Elkins; Karen H. Rosenlof; Johannes C. Laube; T. Röckmann; Daniel R. Marsh; Arlyn E. Andrews

Sulfur hexafluoride (SF6) is a greenhouse gas with one of the highest radiative efficiencies in the atmosphere as well as an important indicator of transport time scales in the stratosphere. The current widely used estimate of the atmospheric lifetime of SF6 is 3200 years. In this study we use in situ measurements in the 2000 Arctic polar vortex that sampled air with up to 50% SF6 loss to calculate an SF6 lifetime. Comparison of these measurements with output from the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM) shows that WACCM transport into the vortex is accurate and that an important SF6 loss mechanism, believed to be electron attachment, is missing in the model. Based on the measurements and estimates of the size of the vortex, we calculate an SF6 lifetime of 850 years with an uncertainty range of 580–1400 years. The amount of SF6 loss is shown to be consistent with that of HFC-227ea, which has a lifetime of 670–780 years, adding independent support to our new SF6 lifetime estimate. Based on the revised lifetime the global warming potential of SF6 will decrease only slightly for short time horizons (<100 years) but will decrease substantially for time horizons longer than 2000 years. Also, the use of SF6 measurements as an indicator of transport time scales in the stratosphere clearly must account for potential influence from polar vortex air.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Continued emissions of carbon tetrachloride from the United States nearly two decades after its phaseout for dispersive uses

Lei Hu; Stephen A. Montzka; B. R. Miller; Arlyn E. Andrews; J. B. Miller; Scott J. Lehman; Colm Sweeney; Scot M. Miller; Kirk Thoning; Carolina Siso; Elliot Atlas; D. R. Blake; Joost A. de Gouw; J. B. Gilman; Geoff Dutton; J. W. Elkins; B. D. Hall; Huilin Chen; Marc L. Fischer; Marikate Mountain; Thomas Nehrkorn; Sebastien Biraud; F. L. Moore; Pieter P. Tans

Significance Global-scale observations suggest large unexplained emissions of the ozone-depleting chemical carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) despite stringent limits on its production for dispersive uses for many years. Identifying the sources of continued CCl4 emission is necessary before steps can be taken to accelerate the emission decline and limit future ozone depletion. Results from an extensive air sampling network over the United States indicate continued emission of CCl4 with a similar distribution but much larger magnitude than industrial facilities reporting emissions to the US Environmental Protection Agency. If these emissions are attributable to chlorine production and processing and are indicative of release rates of CCl4 from these industries worldwide, a large fraction of ongoing global emissions of CCl4 can be explained. National-scale emissions of carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) are derived based on inverse modeling of atmospheric observations at multiple sites across the United States from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s flask air sampling network. We estimate an annual average US emission of 4.0 (2.0–6.5) Gg CCl4 y−1 during 2008–2012, which is almost two orders of magnitude larger than reported to the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) (mean of 0.06 Gg y−1) but only 8% (3–22%) of global CCl4 emissions during these years. Emissive regions identified by the observations and consistently shown in all inversion results include the Gulf Coast states, the San Francisco Bay Area in California, and the Denver area in Colorado. Both the observation-derived emissions and the US EPA TRI identified Texas and Louisiana as the largest contributors, accounting for one- to two-thirds of the US national total CCl4 emission during 2008–2012. These results are qualitatively consistent with multiple aircraft and ship surveys conducted in earlier years, which suggested significant enhancements in atmospheric mole fractions measured near Houston and surrounding areas. Furthermore, the emission distribution derived for CCl4 throughout the United States is more consistent with the distribution of industrial activities included in the TRI than with the distribution of other potential CCl4 sources such as uncapped landfills or activities related to population density (e.g., use of chlorine-containing bleach).


Nature | 2018

An unexpected and persistent increase in global emissions of ozone-depleting CFC-11

Stephen A. Montzka; Geoff Dutton; Pengfei Yu; Eric A. Ray; Robert W. Portmann; John S. Daniel; L. J. M. Kuijpers; Brad Hall; Debra Mondeel; Carolina Siso; J. David Nance; Matthew Rigby; Alistair J. Manning; Lei Hu; F. L. Moore; B. R. Miller; J. W. Elkins

The Montreal Protocol was designed to protect the stratospheric ozone layer by enabling reductions in the abundance of ozone-depleting substances such as chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) in the atmosphere1–3. The reduction in the atmospheric concentration of trichlorofluoromethane (CFC-11) has made the second-largest contribution to the decline in the total atmospheric concentration of ozone-depleting chlorine since the 1990s1. However, CFC-11 still contributes one-quarter of all chlorine reaching the stratosphere, and a timely recovery of the stratospheric ozone layer depends on a sustained decline in CFC-11 concentrations1. Here we show that the rate of decline of atmospheric CFC-11 concentrations observed at remote measurement sites was constant from 2002 to 2012, and then slowed by about 50 per cent after 2012. The observed slowdown in the decline of CFC-11 concentration was concurrent with a 50 per cent increase in the mean concentration difference observed between the Northern and Southern Hemispheres, and also with the emergence of strong correlations at the Mauna Loa Observatory between concentrations of CFC-11 and other chemicals associated with anthropogenic emissions. A simple model analysis of our findings suggests an increase in CFC-11 emissions of 13 ± 5 gigagrams per year (25 ± 13 per cent) since 2012, despite reported production being close to zero4 since 2006. Our three-dimensional model simulations confirm the increase in CFC-11 emissions, but indicate that this increase may have been as much as 50 per cent smaller as a result of changes in stratospheric processes or dynamics. The increase in emission of CFC-11 appears unrelated to past production; this suggests unreported new production, which is inconsistent with the Montreal Protocol agreement to phase out global CFC production by 2010.Atmospheric CFC-11 concentrations have been declining less rapidly since 2012; evidence suggests that this finding is explained by an increase in the emission of CFC-11during these years.

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Eric A. Ray

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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John J. Bollinger

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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David J. Wineland

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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Wayne M. Itano

National Institute of Standards and Technology

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D. J. Heinzen

University of Texas at Austin

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Karen H. Rosenlof

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Mark G. Raizen

University of Texas at Austin

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D. W. Fahey

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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