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Dive into the research topics where Meghan Stell is active.

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Featured researches published by Meghan Stell.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Oxidation of mercury by bromine in the subtropical Pacific free troposphere

Lynne E. Gratz; Jesse L. Ambrose; Daniel A. Jaffe; Viral Shah; Lyatt Jaeglé; J. Stutz; James Festa; Max Spolaor; Catalina Tsai; Noelle E. Selin; Shaojie Song; X. Zhou; Andrew J. Weinheimer; D. J. Knapp; D. D. Montzka; F. Flocke; Teresa L. Campos; Eric C. Apel; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Nicola J. Blake; Samuel R. Hall; Geoffrey S. Tyndall; M. Reeves; D. Stechman; Meghan Stell

Mercury is a global toxin that can be introduced to ecosystems through atmospheric deposition. Mercury oxidation is thought to occur in the free troposphere by bromine radicals, but direct observational evidence for this process is currently unavailable. During the 2013 Nitrogen, Oxidants, Mercury and Aerosol Distributions, Sources and Sinks campaign, we measured enhanced oxidized mercury and bromine monoxide in a free tropospheric air mass over Texas. We use trace gas measurements, air mass back trajectories, and a chemical box model to confirm the origin and chemical history of the sampled air mass. We find the presence of elevated oxidized mercury to be consistent with oxidation of elemental mercury by bromine atoms in this subsiding upper tropospheric air mass within the subtropical Pacific High, where dry atmospheric conditions are conducive to oxidized mercury accumulation. Our results support the role of bromine as the dominant oxidant of mercury in the upper troposphere.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2017

The convective transport of active species in the tropics (Contrast) experiment

Laura L. Pan; E. Atlas; R. J. Salawitch; Shawn B. Honomichl; James F. Bresch; William J. Randel; Eric C. Apel; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Daniel C. Anderson; Stephen J. Andrews; Sunil Baidar; Stuart Beaton; Teresa L. Campos; Lucy J. Carpenter; Dexian Chen; B. Dix; Valeria Donets; Samuel R. Hall; T. F. Hanisco; Cameron R. Homeyer; L. G. Huey; Jorgen B. Jensen; Lisa Kaser; Douglas E. Kinnison; Theodore K. Koenig; Jean-Francois Lamarque; Chuntao Liu; Jiali Luo; Zhengzhao Johnny Luo

The Convective Transport of Active Species in the Tropics (CONTRAST) experiment was conducted from Guam (13.5° N, 144.8° E) during January-February 2014. Using the NSF/NCAR Gulfstream V research aircraft, the experiment investigated the photochemical environment over the tropical western Pacific (TWP) warm pool, a region of massive deep convection and the major pathway for air to enter the stratosphere during Northern Hemisphere (NH) winter. The new observations provide a wealth of information for quantifying the influence of convection on the vertical distributions of active species. The airborne in situ measurements up to 15 km altitude fill a significant gap by characterizing the abundance and altitude variation of a wide suite of trace gases. These measurements, together with observations of dynamical and microphysical parameters, provide significant new data for constraining and evaluating global chemistry climate models. Measurements include precursor and product gas species of reactive halogen compounds that impact ozone in the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere. High accuracy, in-situ measurements of ozone obtained during CONTRAST quantify ozone concentration profiles in the UT, where previous observations from balloon-borne ozonesondes were often near or below the limit of detection. CONTRAST was one of the three coordinated experiments to observe the TWP during January-February 2014. Together, CONTRAST, ATTREX and CAST, using complementary capabilities of the three aircraft platforms as well as ground-based instrumentation, provide a comprehensive quantification of the regional distribution and vertical structure of natural and pollutant trace gases in the TWP during NH winter, from the oceanic boundary to the lower stratosphere.


Environmental Science & Technology | 2015

Mercury Emission Ratios from Coal-Fired Power Plants in the Southeastern United States during NOMADSS

Jesse L. Ambrose; Lynne E. Gratz; Daniel A. Jaffe; Teresa L. Campos; F. Flocke; D. J. Knapp; Daniel M. Stechman; Meghan Stell; Andrew J. Weinheimer; C. A. Cantrell; Roy L. Mauldin

We use measurements made onboard the National Science Foundations C-130 research aircraft during the 2013 Nitrogen, Oxidants, Mercury, and Aerosol Distributions, Sources, and Sinks (NOMADSS) experiment to examine total Hg (THg) emission ratios (EmRs) for six coal-fired power plants (CFPPs) in the southeastern U.S. We compare observed enhancement ratios (ERs) with EmRs calculated using Hg emissions data from two inventories: the National Emissions Inventory (NEI) and the Toxics Release Inventory (TRI). For four CFPPs, our measured ERs are strongly correlated with EmRs based on the 2011 NEI (r(2) = 0.97), although the inventory data exhibit a -39% low bias. Our measurements agree best (to within ±32%) with the NEI Hg data when the latter were derived from on-site emissions measurements. Conversely, the NEI underestimates by approximately 1 order of magnitude the ERs we measured for one previously untested CFPP. Measured ERs are uncorrelated with values based on the 2013 TRI, which also tends to be biased low. Our results suggest that the Hg inventories can be improved by targeting CFPPs for which the NEI- and TRI-based EmRs have significant disagreements. We recommend that future versions of the Hg inventories should provide greater traceability and uncertainty estimates.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

An observationally constrained evaluation of the oxidative capacity in the tropical western Pacific troposphere

Julie M. Nicely; Daniel C. Anderson; T. Canty; R. J. Salawitch; Glenn M. Wolfe; Eric C. Apel; S. R. Arnold; Elliot Atlas; Nicola J. Blake; James F. Bresch; Teresa L. Campos; Russell R. Dickerson; Bryan N. Duncan; Louisa Kent Emmons; M. J. Evans; Rafael P. Fernandez; Johannes Flemming; Samuel R. Hall; T. F. Hanisco; Shawn B. Honomichl; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; V. Huijnen; Lisa Kaser; Douglas E. Kinnison; Jean-Francois Lamarque; Jingqiu Mao; S. A. Monks; D. D. Montzka; Laura L. Pan; Daniel D. Riemer

Hydroxyl radical (OH) is the main daytime oxidant in the troposphere and determines the atmospheric lifetimes of many compounds. We use aircraft measurements of O3, H2O, NO, and other species from the Convective Transport of Active Species in the Tropics (CONTRAST) field campaign, which occurred in the tropical western Pacific (TWP) during January–February 2014, to constrain a photochemical box model and estimate concentrations of OH throughout the troposphere. We find that tropospheric column OH (OHCOL) inferred from CONTRAST observations is 12 to 40% higher than found in chemical transport models (CTMs), including CAM-chem-SD run with 2014 meteorology as well as eight models that participated in POLMIP (2008 meteorology). Part of this discrepancy is due to a clear-sky sampling bias that affects CONTRAST observations; accounting for this bias and also for a small difference in chemical mechanism results in our empirically based value of OHCOL being 0 to 20% larger than found within global models. While these global models simulate observed O3 reasonably well, they underestimate NOx (NO + NO2) by a factor of 2, resulting in OHCOL ~30% lower than box model simulations constrained by observed NO. Underestimations by CTMs of observed CH3CHO throughout the troposphere and of HCHO in the upper troposphere further contribute to differences between our constrained estimates of OH and those calculated by CTMs. Finally, our calculations do not support the prior suggestion of the existence of a tropospheric OH minimum in the TWP, because during January–February 2014 observed levels of O3 and NO were considerably larger than previously reported values in the TWP.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2018

Chemical feedbacks weaken the wintertime response of particulate sulfate and nitrate to emissions reductions over the eastern United States

Viral Shah; Lyatt Jaeglé; Joel A. Thornton; Felipe D. Lopez-Hilfiker; Ben H. Lee; Jason C. Schroder; Pedro Campuzano-Jost; Jose L. Jimenez; Hongyu Guo; Amy P. Sullivan; Rodney J. Weber; Jaime R. Green; Marc N. Fiddler; Solomon Bililign; Teresa L. Campos; Meghan Stell; Andrew J. Weinheimer; D. D. Montzka; Steven S. Brown

Significance Exposure to fine particulate matter is a leading cause of premature deaths and illnesses globally. In the eastern United States, substantial cuts in sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxides emissions have considerably lowered particulate sulfate and nitrate concentrations for all seasons except winter. Simulations that reproduce detailed airborne observations of wintertime atmospheric chemistry over the eastern United States indicate that particulate sulfate and nitrate formation is limited by the availability of oxidants and by the acidity of fine particles, respectively. These limitations relax at lower ambient concentrations, forming particulate matter more efficiently, and weaken the effect of emission reductions. These results imply that larger emission reductions, especially during winter, are necessary for substantial improvements in wintertime air quality in the eastern United States. Sulfate (SO42-) and nitrate (NO3-) account for half of the fine particulate matter mass over the eastern United States. Their wintertime concentrations have changed little in the past decade despite considerable precursor emissions reductions. The reasons for this have remained unclear because detailed observations to constrain the wintertime gas–particle chemical system have been lacking. We use extensive airborne observations over the eastern United States from the 2015 Wintertime Investigation of Transport, Emissions, and Reactivity (WINTER) campaign; ground-based observations; and the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model to determine the controls on winter SO42- and NO3-. GEOS-Chem reproduces observed SO42-–NO3-–NH4+ particulate concentrations (2.45 μg sm-3) and composition (SO42-: 47%; NO3-: 32%; NH4+: 21%) during WINTER. Only 18% of SO2 emissions were regionally oxidized to SO42- during WINTER, limited by low [H2O2] and [OH]. Relatively acidic fine particulates (pH∼1.3) allow 45% of nitrate to partition to the particle phase. Using GEOS-Chem, we examine the impact of the 58% decrease in winter SO2 emissions from 2007 to 2015 and find that the H2O2 limitation on SO2 oxidation weakened, which increased the fraction of SO2 emissions oxidizing to SO42-. Simultaneously, NOx emissions decreased by 35%, but the modeled NO3- particle fraction increased as fine particle acidity decreased. These feedbacks resulted in a 40% decrease of modeled [SO42-] and no change in [NO3-], as observed. Wintertime [SO42-] and [NO3-] are expected to change slowly between 2015 and 2023, unless SO2 and NOx emissions decrease faster in the future than in the recent past.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Stratospheric Injection of Brominated Very Short‐Lived Substances: Aircraft Observations in the Western Pacific and Representation in Global Models

Pamela A. Wales; R. J. Salawitch; Julie M. Nicely; Daniel C. Anderson; T. Canty; Sunil Baidar; B. Dix; Theodore K. Koenig; R. Volkamer; Dexian Chen; L. Gregory Huey; David J. Tanner; Carlos A. Cuevas; Rafael P. Fernandez; Douglas E. Kinnison; Jean-Francois Lamarque; Alfonso Saiz-Lopez; Elliot Atlas; Samuel R. Hall; Maria A. Navarro; Laura L. Pan; S. Schauffler; Meghan Stell; Simone Tilmes; Kirk Ullmann; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Hideharu Akiyoshi; M. P. Chipperfield; Makoto Deushi; S. Dhomse

We quantify the stratospheric injection of brominated very short‐lived substances (VSLS) based on aircraft observations acquired in winter 2014 above the Tropical Western Pacific during the CONvective TRansport of Active Species in the Tropics (CONTRAST) and the Airborne Tropical TRopopause EXperiment (ATTREX) campaigns. The overall contribution of VSLS to stratospheric bromine was determined to be 5.0 ± 2.1 ppt, in agreement with the 5 ± 3 ppt estimate provided in the 2014 World Meteorological Organization (WMO) Ozone Assessment report (WMO 2014), but with lower uncertainty. Measurements of organic bromine compounds, including VSLS, were analyzed using CFC‐11 as a reference stratospheric tracer. From this analysis, 2.9 ± 0.6 ppt of bromine enters the stratosphere via organic source gas injection of VSLS. This value is two times the mean bromine content of VSLS measured at the tropical tropopause, for regions outside of the Tropical Western Pacific, summarized in WMO 2014. A photochemical box model, constrained to CONTRAST observations, was used to estimate inorganic bromine from measurements of BrO collected by two instruments. The analysis indicates that 2.1 ± 2.1 ppt of bromine enters the stratosphere via inorganic product gas injection. We also examine the representation of brominated VSLS within 14 global models that participated in the Chemistry‐Climate Model Initiative. The representation of stratospheric bromine in these models generally lies within the range of our empirical estimate. Models that include explicit representations of VSLS compare better with bromine observations in the lower stratosphere than models that utilize longer‐lived chemicals as a surrogate for VSLS.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Origin of oxidized mercury in the summertime free troposphere over the southeastern US

Viral Shah; Lyatt Jaeglé; Lynne E. Gratz; Jesse L. Ambrose; Daniel A. Jaffe; Noelle E. Selin; Shaojie Song; Teresa L. Campos; F. Flocke; M. Reeves; D. Stechman; Meghan Stell; James Festa; J. Stutz; Andrew J. Weinheimer; D. J. Knapp; D. D. Montzka; Geoffrey S. Tyndall; Eric C. Apel; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Alan J. Hills; Daniel D. Riemer; Nicola J. Blake; C. A. Cantrell; Roy L. Mauldin


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Impacts of the Denver Cyclone on regional air quality and aerosol formation in the Colorado Front Range during FRAPPÉ 2014

Kennedy T. Vu; Justin H. Dingle; R. Bahreini; Patrick J. Reddy; Eric C. Apel; Teresa L. Campos; Joshua P. DiGangi; Glenn S. Diskin; Alan Fried; Scott C. Herndon; Alan J. Hills; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Greg Huey; Lisa Kaser; D. D. Montzka; J. B. Nowak; S. E. Pusede; Dirk Richter; Joseph R. Roscioli; Glen Sachse; Stephen Shertz; Meghan Stell; David J. Tanner; Geoffrey S. Tyndall; James G. Walega; Peter Weibring; Andrew J. Weinheimer; G. G. Pfister; F. Flocke


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Aerosol optical extinction during the Front Range Air Pollution andPhotochemistry Éxperiment (FRAPPÉ) 2014 summertime field campaign,Colorado, USA

Justin H. Dingle; Kennedy T. Vu; R. Bahreini; Eric C. Apel; Teresa L. Campos; F. Flocke; Alan Fried; Scott C. Herndon; Alan J. Hills; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Greg Huey; Lisa Kaser; D. D. Montzka; J. B. Nowak; M. Reeves; Dirk Richter; Joseph R. Roscioli; Stephen Shertz; Meghan Stell; David J. Tanner; Geoff Tyndall; James G. Walega; Petter Weibring; Andrew J. Weinheimer


Atmospheric Environment | 2016

Airborne observations of mercury emissions from the Chicago/Gary urban/industrial area during the 2013 NOMADSS campaign

Lynne E. Gratz; Jesse L. Ambrose; Daniel A. Jaffe; Christoph Knote; Lyatt Jaeglé; Noelle E. Selin; Teresa L. Campos; F. Flocke; M. Reeves; D. Stechman; Meghan Stell; Andrew J. Weinheimer; D. J. Knapp; D. D. Montzka; Geoffrey S. Tyndall; Roy L. Mauldin; C. A. Cantrell; Eric C. Apel; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Nicola J. Blake

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Teresa L. Campos

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Andrew J. Weinheimer

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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D. D. Montzka

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Rebecca S. Hornbrook

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Eric C. Apel

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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F. Flocke

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Lisa Kaser

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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D. J. Knapp

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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