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Dive into the research topics where Louis Marelle is active.

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Featured researches published by Louis Marelle.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2015

Quantifying Emerging Local Anthropogenic Emissions in the Arctic Region: The ACCESS Aircraft Campaign Experiment

Anke Roiger; Jennie L. Thomas; Hans Schlager; Kathy S. Law; J. Kim; Andreas Schäfler; Bernadett Weinzierl; F. Dahlkötter; I. Krisch; Louis Marelle; Andreas Minikin; Jean-Christophe Raut; Anja Reiter; Maximilian Rose; Monika Scheibe; Paul Stock; Robert Baumann; Cathy Clerbaux; Maya George; Tatsuo Onishi; Johannes Flemming

AbstractArctic sea ice has decreased dramatically in the past few decades and the Arctic is increasingly open to transit shipping and natural resource extraction. However, large knowledge gaps exist regarding composition and impacts of emissions associated with these activities. Arctic hydrocarbon extraction is currently under development owing to the large oil and gas reserves in the region. Transit shipping through the Arctic as an alternative to the traditional shipping routes is currently underway. These activities are expected to increase emissions of air pollutants and climate forcers (e.g., aerosols, ozone) in the Arctic troposphere significantly in the future. The authors present the first measurements of these activities off the coast of Norway taken in summer 2012 as part of the European Arctic Climate Change, Economy, and Society (ACCESS) project. The objectives include quantifying the impact that anthropogenic activities will have on regional air pollution and understanding the connections to ...


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Quantifying black carbon deposition over the Greenland ice sheet from forest fires in Canada

Jennie L. Thomas; Chris Polashenski; Amber Jeanine Soja; Louis Marelle; Kimberley Casey; Hyun Deok Choi; Jean-Christophe Raut; Christine Wiedinmyer; Louisa Kent Emmons; Jerome D. Fast; Jacques Pelon; Kathy S. Law; Mark G. Flanner; Jack E. Dibb

Black carbon (BC) concentrations observed in 22 snowpits sampled in the northwest sector of the Greenland ice sheet in April 2014 have allowed us to identify a strong and widespread BC aerosol deposition event, which was dated to have accumulated in the pits from two snow storms between 27 July and 2 August 2013. This event comprises a significant portion (57% on average across all pits) of total BC deposition over 10 months (July 2013 to April 2014). Here we link this deposition event to forest fires burning in Canada during summer 2013 using modeling and remote sensing tools. Aerosols were detected by both the Cloud-Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization (on board CALIPSO) and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (Aqua) instruments during transport between Canada and Greenland. We use high-resolution regional chemical transport modeling (WRF-Chem) combined with high-resolution fire emissions (FINNv1.5) to study aerosol emissions, transport, and deposition during this event. The model captures the timing of the BC deposition event and shows that fires in Canada were the main source of deposited BC. However, the model underpredicts BC deposition compared to measurements at all sites by a factor of 2–100. Underprediction of modeled BC deposition originates from uncertainties in fire emissions and model treatment of wet removal of aerosols. Improvements in model descriptions of precipitation scavenging and emissions from wildfires are needed to correctly predict deposition, which is critical for determining the climate impacts of aerosols that originate from fires.


AMBIO: A Journal of the Human Environment | 2017

Local Arctic air pollution: Sources and impacts

Kathy S. Law; Anke Roiger; Jennie L. Thomas; Louis Marelle; Jean-Christophe Raut; Stig B. Dalsøren; Jan S. Fuglestvedt; Paolo Tuccella; Bernadett Weinzierl; Hans Schlager

Local emissions of Arctic air pollutants and their impacts on climate, ecosystems and health are poorly understood. Future increases due to Arctic warming or economic drivers may put additional pressures on the fragile Arctic environment already affected by mid-latitude air pollution. Aircraft data were collected, for the first time, downwind of shipping and petroleum extraction facilities in the European Arctic. Data analysis reveals discrepancies compared to commonly used emission inventories, highlighting missing emissions (e.g. drilling rigs) and the intermittent nature of certain emissions (e.g. flaring, shipping). Present-day shipping/petroleum extraction emissions already appear to be impacting pollutant (ozone, aerosols) levels along the Norwegian coast and are estimated to cool and warm the Arctic climate, respectively. Future increases in shipping may lead to short-term (long-term) warming (cooling) due to reduced sulphur (CO2) emissions, and be detrimental to regional air quality (ozone). Further quantification of local Arctic emission impacts is needed.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Pollution transport from North America to Greenland during summer 2008

Jennie L. Thomas; Jean-Christophe Raut; Kathy S. Law; Louis Marelle; Gérard Ancellet; François Ravetta; Jerome D. Fast; G. G. Pfister; Louisa Kent Emmons; Glenn S. Diskin; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Anke Roiger; Hans Schlager


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Air quality and radiative impacts of Arctic shipping emissions in the summertime in northern Norway: from the local to the regional scale

Louis Marelle; Jennie L. Thomas; Jean-Christophe Raut; Kathy S. Law; Jukka-Pekka Jalkanen; Lasse Johansson; Anke Roiger; Hans Schlager; J. Kim; Anja Reiter; Bernadett Weinzierl


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2014

Transport of anthropogenic and biomass burning aerosols from Europe to the Arctic during spring 2008

Louis Marelle; Jean-Christophe Raut; Jennie L. Thomas; Kathy S. Law; Boris Quennehen; Gérard Ancellet; Jacques Pelon; Alfons Schwarzenboeck; Jerome D. Fast


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Ship emissions measurement in the Arctic by plume intercepts of the Canadian Coast Guard icebreaker Amundsen from the Polar 6 aircraft platform

Amir A. Aliabadi; Jennie L. Thomas; Andreas Herber; Ralf M. Staebler; W. Richard Leaitch; Hannes Schulz; Kathy S. Law; Louis Marelle; Julia Burkart; Megan D. Willis; Heiko Bozem; P. Hoor; Franziska Köllner; Johannes Schneider; Maurice Levasseur; Jonathan P. D. Abbatt


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017

Cross-polar transport and scavenging of Siberian aerosols containing black carbon during the 2012 ACCESS summer campaign

Jean Christophe Raut; Louis Marelle; Jerome D. Fast; Jennie L. Thomas; Bernadett Weinzierl; K. S. Law; Larry K. Berg; Anke Roiger; Richard C. Easter; Katharina Heimerl; Tatsuo Onishi; Julien Delanoë; Hans Schlager


Geoscientific Model Development Discussions | 2017

Improvements to the WRF-Chem model for quasi-hemispheric simulations of aerosols and ozone in the Arctic

Louis Marelle; Jean-Christophe Raut; Kathy S. Law; Larry K. Berg; Jerome D. Fast; Richard C. Easter; ManishKumar B. Shrivastava; Jennie L. Thomas


Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene | 2017

Air pollution impacts due to petroleum extraction in the Norwegian Sea during the ACCESS aircraft campaign

P. Tuccella; Jennie L. Thomas; K. S. Law; Jean-Christophe Raut; Louis Marelle; Anke Roiger; Bernadett Weinzierl; H. A. C. Denier van der Gon; Hans Schlager; Tatsuo Onishi

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Jerome D. Fast

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Anke Roiger

German Aerospace Center

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Kathy S. Law

University of Cambridge

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Kathy S. Law

University of Cambridge

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Louisa Kent Emmons

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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