G. Krysztofiak
University of Orléans
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Featured researches published by G. Krysztofiak.
Chemosphere | 2011
Thorsten Bartels-Rausch; G. Krysztofiak; Andreas Paul Friedrich Bernhard; Manuel Schlappi; Margit Schwikowski; Markus Ammann
Reduction of divalent mercury and subsequent emission to the atmosphere has been identified as loss process from surface snow, but its mechanism and importance are still unclear. The amount of mercury that stays in the snow pack until spring is of significance, because during snow melt it may be released to the aquatic environment and enter the food web. Better knowledge of its fate in snow might further assist the interpretation of ice core data as paleo-archive. Experiments were performed under well-controlled laboratory conditions in a coated wall flow tube at atmospheric pressure and irradiated with light between 300 nm and 420 nm. Our results show that the presence of benzophenone and of oxalic acid significantly enhances the release of mercury from the ice film during irradiation, whereas humic acid is less potent to promote the reduction. Further it was found that oxygen or chloride, and acidic conditions lowered the photolytically induced mercury release in the presence of benzophenone, while the release got larger with increasing temperatures.
Geophysical Research Letters | 2015
N. Glatthor; M. Höpfner; Ian T. Baker; Joseph A. Berry; J. E. Campbell; S. R. Kawa; G. Krysztofiak; A. Leyser; B.-M. Sinnhuber; G. P. Stiller; J. Stinecipher; T. von Clarmann
According to current budget estimations the seasonal variation of carbonyl sulfide (COS) is governed by oceanic release and vegetation uptake. Its assimilation by plants is assumed to be similar to the photosynthetic uptake of CO 2 but, contrary to the latter process, to be irreversible. Therefore, COS has been suggested as cotracer of the carbon cycle. Observations of COS, however, are sparse, especially in tropical regions. We use the comprehensive data set of spaceborne measurements of the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding to analyze its global distribution. Two major features are observed in the tropical upper troposphere around 250 hPa: enhanced amounts over the western Pacific and the Maritime Continent, peaking around 550 parts per trillion by volume (pptv) in boreal summer, and a seasonally varying depletion of COS extending from tropical South America to Africa. The large-scale COS depletion, which in austral summer amounts up to −40 pptv as compared to the rest of the respective latitude band, has not been observed before and reveals the seasonality of COS uptake through tropical vegetation. The observations can only be reproduced by global models, when a large vegetation uptake and a corresponding increase in oceanic emissions as proposed in several recent publications are assumed.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2017
Philippe Ricaud; Régina Zbinden; Valéry Catoire; Vanessa Brocchi; François Dulac; Eric Hamonou; Jean-Christophe Canonici; Laaziz El Amraoui; S. Massart; Bruno Piguet; Uri Dayan; Pierre Nabat; Jean Sciare; Michel Ramonet; Marc Delmotte; Alcide di Sarra; Damiano Sferlazzo; Tatiana Di Iorio; S. Piacentino; Paolo Cristofanelli; Nikos Mihalopoulos; G. Kouvarakis; Michael Pikridas; Chrysanthos Savvides; Rodanthi-Elisavet Mamouri; Argyro Nisantzi; Diofantos G. Hadjimitsis; Jean-Luc Attié; Hélène Ferré; Yannick Kangah
AbstractThe Gradient in Longitude of Atmospheric Constituents above the Mediterranean Basin (GLAM) airborne campaign was set up to investigate the summertime variability of gaseous pollutants, greenhouse gases, and aerosols between the western (∼3°E) and eastern (∼35°E) sections of the Mediterranean basin as well as how this connects with the impact of the Asian monsoon anticyclone on the eastern Mediterranean in the mid- to upper troposphere (∼5–10 km). GLAM falls within the framework of the Chemistry–Aerosol Mediterranean Experiment (ChArMEx) program. GLAM used the French Falcon-20 research aircraft to measure aerosols, humidity, and chemical compounds: ozone, carbon monoxide, methane, and carbon dioxide. GLAM took place between 6 and 10 August 2014, following a route from Toulouse (France) to Larnaca (Cyprus) and back again via Minorca (Spain), Lampedusa (Italy), and Heraklion (Crete, Greece). The aircraft flew at an altitude of 5 km on its outbound journey and 10 km on the return leg. GLAM also collec...
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013
Fabrice Jégou; Gwenaël Berthet; Colette Brogniez; Jean-Baptiste Renard; Philippe François; James M. Haywood; Andy Jones; Quentin Bourgeois; Thibaut Lurton; Frédérique Auriol; Sophie Godin-Beekmann; Christophe Guimbaud; G. Krysztofiak; Bertrand Gaubicher; Michel Chartier; Lieven Clarisse; Cathy Clerbaux; J. Y. Balois; Christian Verwaerde; Daniel Daugeron
Atmosphere-ocean | 2015
G. Krysztofiak; Yao Veng Té; Valéry Catoire; Gwenaël Berthet; Geoffrey C. Toon; Fabrice Jégou; Pascal Jeseck; Claude Robert
Atmospheric Environment | 2012
G. Krysztofiak; Valéry Catoire; G. Poulet; Virginie Marécal; Michel Pirre; Florent Louis; S. Canneaux; B. Josse
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016
Gwenaël Berthet; Fabrice Jégou; Valéry Catoire; G. Krysztofiak; Jean-Baptiste Renard; Doug A. Degenstein; Colette Brogniez; M. Dorf; Sebastian Kreycy; K. Pfeilsticker; Bodo Werner; Franck Lefèvre; Tjarda J. Roberts; Thibaut Lurton; Damien Vignelles; Nelson Bègue; Quentin Bourgeois; Daniel Daugeron; Michel Chartier; Claude Robert; Bertrand Gaubicher; Christophe Guimbaud
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011
Virginie Marécal; Michel Pirre; G. Krysztofiak; P. D. Hamer; B. Josse
Applied Physics B | 2017
Valéry Catoire; Claude Robert; Michel Chartier; Patrick Jacquet; Christophe Guimbaud; G. Krysztofiak
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017
Stephanie Falk; B.-M. Sinnhuber; G. Krysztofiak; Patrick Jöckel; Phoebe Graf; Sinikka T. Lennartz