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Featured researches published by L. C. Valin.


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.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Characterizing CO and NOy Sources and Relative Ambient Ratios in the Baltimore Area Using Ambient Measurements and Source Attribution Modeling

Heather Simon; L. C. Valin; Kirk R. Baker; B. H. Henderson; J. H. Crawford; S. E. Pusede; James T. Kelly; Kristen M. Foley; R. Chris Owen; R. C. Cohen; Brian Timin; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Norm Possiel; Chris Misenis; Glenn S. Diskin; Alan Fried


Archive | 2010

Constraints on urban VOC emissions from day of week measurements of column NO2

L. C. Valin; Ashley Russell; R. C. Cohen


Archive | 2010

Evaluation of an Improved Retrieval of OMI NO2 Column Using Within Boundary Layer Aircraft Observations

Ashley Russell; L. C. Valin; A. E. Perring


Archive | 2010

Improved parameterization of wildfire NOx emissions using MODIS fire radiative power and OMI tropospheric NO2 columns

A. K. Mebust; Ashley Russell; Rynda Christina Hudman; L. C. Valin; R. C. Cohen


Archive | 2009

Satellite radiative power-based emission factors for nitrogen oxides from wildland fires in California

A. K. Mebust; Ashley Russell; L. C. Valin; R. C. Cohen


Archive | 2009

Tropospheric NO2 column observations from OMI: quantifying spatial and temporal resolution for evaluation of emissions and chemistry models

R. C. Cohen; L. C. Valin; Ashley Russell


Archive | 2009

Diurnal variation of column NO2 observed from space

L. C. Valin; Ashley Russell; Rynda Christina Hudman; A. K. Mebust; R. C. Cohen


Archive | 2008

Satellite Based Investigations of Day-of-Week Variation in NOx Emissions

Ashley Russell; L. C. Valin; S. A. Schmutz; P. M. Tay; R. C. Cohen


Archive | 2008

On the Use of Boundary Layer NO2 Observations From an Airborne Platform for Satellite Validation

A. E. Perring; Ashley Russell; L. C. Valin; Timothy H. Bertram; P. J. Wooldridge; R. C. Cohen

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R. C. Cohen

University of California

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Andrew J. Weinheimer

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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James T. Kelly

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Kirk R. Baker

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Rynda Christina Hudman

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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B. H. Henderson

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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Brian Timin

United States Environmental Protection Agency

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