S. R. Zorn
Max Planck Society
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Featured researches published by S. R. Zorn.
Science | 2010
Ulrich Pöschl; Scot T. Martin; B. Sinha; Qi Chen; Sachin S. Gunthe; J. A. Huffman; S. Borrmann; Delphine K. Farmer; Rebecca M. Garland; Jose L. Jimenez; Stephanie King; Antonio O. Manzi; E. F. Mikhailov; Theotonio Pauliquevis; Markus D. Petters; Anthony J. Prenni; Pontus Roldin; D. Rose; Johannes Schneider; Hang Su; S. R. Zorn; Paulo Artaxo; Meinrat O. Andreae
Clean or Dirty Aerosols strongly affect atmospheric properties and processes—including visibility, cloud formation, and radiative behavior. Knowing their effects in both clean and polluted air is necessary in order to understand their influence (see the Perspective by Baltensperger). Clarke and Kapustin (p. 1488) examine vertical atmospheric profiles collected above the Pacific Ocean, where air quality is affected by the transport of polluted air from the west, and find significant regional enhancements in light scattering, aerosol mass, and aerosol number associated with combustion. Aerosol particle concentrations in this region can exceed values in clean, unperturbed regions by over an order of magnitude. Thus combustion affects hemispheric aerosol optical depth and the distribution of cloud condensation nuclei. Pöschl et al. (p. 1513) discuss the composition of aerosols above the Amazon Basin, in the pristine conditions of the rainy season. The aerosols in this region are derived mostly from gaseous biogenic precursors, plants, and microorganisms, and particle concentration is orders of magnitude lower than in polluted continental regions. The majority of cloud condensation nuclei in the Amazon during the wet season are derived from biogenic precursors. The Amazon is one of the few continental regions where atmospheric aerosol particles and their effects on climate are not dominated by anthropogenic sources. During the wet season, the ambient conditions approach those of the pristine pre-industrial era. We show that the fine submicrometer particles accounting for most cloud condensation nuclei are predominantly composed of secondary organic material formed by oxidation of gaseous biogenic precursors. Supermicrometer particles, which are relevant as ice nuclei, consist mostly of primary biological material directly released from rainforest biota. The Amazon Basin appears to be a biogeochemical reactor, in which the biosphere and atmospheric photochemistry produce nuclei for clouds and precipitation sustaining the hydrological cycle. The prevailing regime of aerosol-cloud interactions in this natural environment is distinctly different from polluted regions.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2008
S. R. Zorn; Frank Drewnick; Mathias Schott; Thorsten Hoffmann; S. Borrmann
Measurements of the submicron fraction of the atmospheric aerosol in the marine boundary layer were performed from January to March 2007 (Southern Hemisphere summer) onboard the French research vessel Marion Dufresnein the Southern Atlantic and Indian Ocean (20 S–60 S, 70 W–60 E). We used an Aerodyne HighResolution-Time-of-Flight AMS to characterize the chemical composition and to measure species-resolved size distributions of non-refractory aerosol components in the submicron range. Within the “standard” AMS compounds (ammonium, chloride, nitrate, sulfate, organics) “sulfate” is the dominant species in the marine boundary layer with concentrations ranging between 50 ng m −3 and 3μg m−3. Furthermore, what is seen as “sulfate” by the AMS is likely comprised mostly of sulfuric acid. Another sulfur containing species that is produced in marine environments is methanesulfonic acid (MSA). There have been previously measurements of MSA using an Aerodyne AMS. However, due to the use of an instrument equipped with a quadrupole detector with unit mass resolution it was not possible to physically separate MSA from other contributions to the same m/z. In order to identify MSA within the HR-ToF-AMS raw data and to extract mass concentrations for MSA from the field measurements the standard high-resolution MSA fragmentation patterns for the measurement conditions during the ship campaign (e.g. vaporizer temperature) needed to be determined. To identify characteristic air masses and their source regions backwards trajectories were used and averaged concentrations for AMS standard compounds were calculated for Correspondence to: S. R. Zorn ([email protected]) each air mass type. Sulfate mass size distributions were measured for these periods showing a distinct difference between oceanic air masses and those from African outflow. While the peak in the mass distribution was roughly at 250 nm (vacuum aerodynamic diameter) in marine air masses, it was shifted to 470 nm in African outflow air. Correlations between the mass concentrations of sulfate, organics and MSA show a narrow correlation for MSA with sulfate/sulfuric acid coming from the ocean, but not with continental sulfate.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2010
Scot T. Martin; Meinrat O. Andreae; Dietrich Althausen; Paulo Artaxo; Holger Baars; S. Borrmann; Qi Chen; Delphine K. Farmer; Alex Guenther; Sachin S. Gunthe; Jose L. Jimenez; Thomas Karl; Karla M. Longo; Antonio O. Manzi; T. Müuller; Theotonio Pauliquevis; Markus D. Petters; Anthony J. Prenni; Ulrich Pöschl; Luciana V. Rizzo; Johannes Schneider; James N. Smith; Erik Swietlicki; J. Tota; Jun Wang; A. Wiedensohler; S. R. Zorn
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011
K. Lapina; Colette L. Heald; D. V. Spracklen; S. R. Arnold; J. D. Allan; Hugh Coe; Gordon McFiggans; S. R. Zorn; Frank Drewnick; T. S. Bates; Lelia N. Hawkins; Lynn M. Russell; Alexander Smirnov; Colin D. O'Dowd; A. Hind
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011
Johannes Schneider; F. Freutel; S. R. Zorn; Qi Chen; Delphine K. Farmer; Jose L. Jimenez; Scot T. Martin; Paulo Artaxo; A. Wiedensohler; S. Borrmann
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2012
Frank Drewnick; Thomas Böttger; S.-L. von der Weiden-Reinmüller; S. R. Zorn; Thomas Klimach; Johannes Schneider; S. Borrmann
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011
Carlena J. Ebben; Imee Su Martinez; Mona Shrestha; Avram M. Buchbinder; A. L. Corrigan; Alex Guenther; Thomas Karl; Tuukka Petäjä; W. Song; S. R. Zorn; Paulo Artaxo; Markku Kulmala; Scot T. Martin; Lynn M. Russell; J. Williams; Franz M. Geiger
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2012
J. M. Diesch; Frank Drewnick; S. R. Zorn; S.-L. von der Weiden-Reinmüller; M. Martinez; S. Borrmann
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011
J. M. Diesch; Frank Drewnick; S. R. Zorn; S.-L. von der Weiden-Reinmüller; M. Martinez; S. Borrmann
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011
Johannes Schneider; F. Freutel; S. R. Zorn; Qi Chen; Delphine K. Farmer; J. L. Jimenez; Scot T. Martin; P. P. Artaxo; A. Wiedensohler; S. Borrmann