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Dive into the research topics where Paul O. Wennberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul O. Wennberg.


Nature | 2003

Extreme deuterium enrichment in stratospheric hydrogen and the global atmospheric budget of H2.

Thorn Rahn; John M. Eiler; Kristle A. Boering; Paul O. Wennberg; Michael McCarthy; Stanley C. Tyler; S. Schauffler; Stephen George Donnelly; Elliot Atlas

Molecular hydrogen (H2) is the second most abundant trace gas in the atmosphere after methane (CH4). In the troposphere, the D/H ratio of H2 is enriched by 120‰ relative to the worlds oceans. This cannot be explained by the sources of H2 for which the D/H ratio has been measured to date (for example, fossil fuels and biomass burning). But the isotopic composition of H2 from its single largest source—the photochemical oxidation of methane—has yet to be determined. Here we show that the D/H ratio of stratospheric H2 develops enrichments greater than 440‰, the most extreme D/H enrichment observed in a terrestrial material. We estimate the D/H ratio of H2 produced from CH4 in the stratosphere, where production is isolated from the influences of non-photochemical sources and sinks, showing that the chain of reactions producing H2 from CH4 concentrates D in the product H2. This enrichment, which we estimate is similar on a global average in the troposphere, contributes substantially to the D/H ratio of tropospheric H2.


Archive | 2016

Green Ocean Amazon 2014/15 – Scaling Amazon Carbon Water Couplings Field Campaign Report

Manvendra K. Dubey; Harrison Parket; Katherine Myers; Thom Rahn; B. Christoffersson; Debra Wunch; Paul O. Wennberg

Forests soak up 25% of the carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted by anthropogenic fossil energy use (10 Gt C y-1), moderating its atmospheric accumulation. How this terrestrial CO2 uptake will evolve with climate change in the 21st Century is largely unknown. Rainforests are the most active ecosystems, with the Amazon basin storing 120 Gt C as biomass and exchanging 18 Gt C y-1 of CO2 via photosynthesis and respiration and fixing carbon at 2-3 kg C m-2 y-1. Furthermore, the intense hydrologic and carbon cycles are tightly coupled in the Amazon where about half of the water is recycled by evapotranspiration and the other half imported from the ocean by Northeasterly trade winds. Climate models predict a drying in the Amazon with reduced carbon uptake while observationally guided assessments indicate sustained uptake. We set out to resolve this huge discrepancy in the size and sign of the future Amazon carbon cycle by performing the first simultaneous regional-scale high-frequency measurements of atmospheric CO2, H2O, HOD, CH4, N2O, and CO at the T3 site in Manacupuru, Brazil, as part of DOEs GoAmazon 2014/15 project. Our data will be used to inform and develop DOEs Community Land Model (CLM) on the tropical carbon-water couplingsmorexa0» at the appropriate grid scale (10-50 km). Our measurements will also validate the CO2 data from Japans Greenhouse gases Observing Satellite (GOSAT) and NASAs Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO)-2 satellite (launched in July, 2014). Our data addresses these science questions: 1. How does ecosystem heterogeneity and climate variability influence the rainforest carbon cycle? 2. How well do current tropical ecosystem models simulate the observed regional carbon cycle? 3. Does nitrogen deposition (from the Manaus, Brazil, plume) enhance rainforest carbon uptake?«xa0less


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2013

Improvement of the retrieval algorithm for GOSAT SWIR XCO2 and XCH4 and their validation using TCCON data

Yoshiyuki Yoshida; Nobuyuki Kikuchi; Isamu Morino; Osamu Uchino; Sergey Oshchepkov; Andrey Bril; Tazu Saeki; N. A. J. Schutgens; Geoffrey C. Toon; Debra Wunch; Coleen M. Roehl; Paul O. Wennberg; David W. T. Griffith; Nicholas M Deutscher; Thorsten Warneke; Justus Notholt; John Robinson; Vanessa Sherlock; Brian J. Connor; Markus Rettinger; Ralf Sussmann; P. Ahonen; Pauli Heikkinen; E. Kyrö; J. Mendonca; Kimberly Strong; Frank Hase; S. Dohe; Tatsuya Yokota


Archive | 2014

Total Column Carbon Observing Network (TCCON) Site: Darwin

David W. T. Griffith; Nicholas M Deutscher; V. Velazco; Paul O. Wennberg; Y. G. Yavin; Gretchen Keppel Aleks; Rebecca A. Washenfelder; Geoffrey C. Toon; Jean-Francois Blavier; Clare Murphy; Nicholas Jones; Graham Kettlewell; Brian J. Connor; R. Macatangay; Coleen M. Roehl; Maciej Ryczek; John Glowacki; Troy Culgan; G Bryant


Archive | 2014

Total Column Carbon Observing Network (TCCON) Site: Park Falls

Paul O. Wennberg; Coleen M. Roehl; Debra Wunch; Geoffrey C. Toon; Jean-Francois Blavier; Rebecca A. Washenfelder; G. Keppel-Aleks; Norton Allen; Jeffrey Ayers


Archive | 2014

Total Column Carbon Observing Network (TCCON) Site: Lamont

Paul O. Wennberg; Debra Wunch; Coleen M. Roehl; Jean-Francois Blavier; Geoffrey C. Toon; Norton Allen; Pat Dowell; Kenneth Teske; Chris Martin; James Martin


Archive | 2015

Total Column Carbon Observing Network (TCCON), Site: Pasadena, California

Paul O. Wennberg; Debra Wunch; Jean-Francois Blavier; Geoffrey C. Toon; Norton Allen


Archive | 2014

Total Column Carbon Observing Network (TCCON) Site: Jet Propulsion Laboratory 02

Paul O. Wennberg; Coleen M. Roehl; Jean-Francois Blavier; Jess Landeros; Allen Norton


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2008

Isoprene photooxidation mechanism: resonance channels and implications for the production of nitrates and acids

Fabien Paulot; John D. Crounse; Henrik G. Kjaergaard; Jesse H. Kroll; John H. Seinfeld; Paul O. Wennberg


Archive | 2011

MATMOS: the Mars atmospheric Trace Molecule Occultation Spectrometer

Paul O. Wennberg; V. J. Hipkin; James R. Drummond; U. Dalhousie; Geoffrey C. Toon; Mark Allen; J.-F. Blavier; Lynn Brown; Armin Kleinböhl; Jonathan P. D. Abbatt; Barbara Sherwood Lollar; Kimberly Strong; Kaley A. Walker; Peter F. Bernath; R. Todd Clancy; Edward A. Cloutis; David J. Desmarais; John M. Eiler; Yuk L. Yung; Therese Encrenaz; J. C. McConnell

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John D. Crounse

California Institute of Technology

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Geoffrey C. Toon

California Institute of Technology

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Coleen M. Roehl

California Institute of Technology

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Andrew J. Weinheimer

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Jack E. Dibb

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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