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Dive into the research topics where Theodore K. Koenig is active.

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Featured researches published by Theodore K. Koenig.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Active and widespread halogen chemistry in the tropical and subtropical free troposphere

Siyuan Wang; Johan A. Schmidt; Sunil Baidar; Sean Coburn; B. Dix; Theodore K. Koenig; Eric C. Apel; Dene Bowdalo; Teresa L. Campos; Ed Eloranta; M. J. Evans; Joshua Digangi; Mark A. Zondlo; Ru Shan Gao; Julie Haggerty; Samuel R. Hall; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Daniel J. Jacob; Bruce Morley; Bradley Pierce; M. Reeves; Pavel Romashkin; Arnout ter Schure; R. Volkamer

Significance Our measurements show that tropospheric halogen chemistry has a larger capacity to destroy O3 and oxidize atmospheric mercury than previously recognized. Halogen chemistry is currently missing in most global and climate models, and is effective at removing O3 at altitudes where intercontinental O3 transport occurs. It further helps explain the low O3 levels in preindustrial times. Public health concerns arise from bioaccumulation of the neurotoxin mercury in fish. Our results emphasize that bromine chemistry in the free troposphere oxidizes mercury at a faster rate, and makes water-soluble mercury available for scavenging by thunderstorms. Naturally occurring bromine in air aloft illustrates global interconnectedness between energy choices affecting mercury emissions in developing nations and mercury deposition in, e.g., Nevada, or the southeastern United States. Halogens in the troposphere are increasingly recognized as playing an important role for atmospheric chemistry, and possibly climate. Bromine and iodine react catalytically to destroy ozone (O3), oxidize mercury, and modify oxidative capacity that is relevant for the lifetime of greenhouse gases. Most of the tropospheric O3 and methane (CH4) loss occurs at tropical latitudes. Here we report simultaneous measurements of vertical profiles of bromine oxide (BrO) and iodine oxide (IO) in the tropical and subtropical free troposphere (10°N to 40°S), and show that these halogens are responsible for 34% of the column-integrated loss of tropospheric O3. The observed BrO concentrations increase strongly with altitude (∼3.4 pptv at 13.5 km), and are 2–4 times higher than predicted in the tropical free troposphere. BrO resembles model predictions more closely in stratospheric air. The largest model low bias is observed in the lower tropical transition layer (TTL) over the tropical eastern Pacific Ocean, and may reflect a missing inorganic bromine source supplying an additional 2.5–6.4 pptv total inorganic bromine (Bry), or model overestimated Bry wet scavenging. Our results highlight the importance of heterogeneous chemistry on ice clouds, and imply an additional Bry source from the debromination of sea salt residue in the lower TTL. The observed levels of bromine oxidize mercury up to 3.5 times faster than models predict, possibly increasing mercury deposition to the ocean. The halogen-catalyzed loss of tropospheric O3 needs to be considered when estimating past and future ozone radiative effects.


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.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2015

Injection of iodine to the stratosphere

Alfonso Saiz-Lopez; Sunil Baidar; Carlos A. Cuevas; Theodore K. Koenig; Rafael P. Fernandez; B. Dix; Douglas E. Kinnison; Jean-Francois Lamarque; Xavier Rodriguez-Lloveras; Teresa L. Campos; R. Volkamer

We report a new estimation of the injection of iodine into the stratosphere based on novel daytime (solar zenith angle < 45°) aircraft observations in the tropical tropopause layer and a global atmospheric model with the most recent knowledge about iodine photochemistry. The results indicate that significant levels of total reactive iodine (0.25–0.7 parts per trillion by volume), between 2 and 5 times larger than the accepted upper limits, can be injected into the stratosphere via tropical convective outflow. At these iodine levels, modeled iodine catalytic cycles account for up to 30% of the contemporary ozone loss in the tropical lower stratosphere and can exert a stratospheric ozone depletion potential equivalent to, or even larger than, that of very short-lived bromocarbons. Therefore, we suggest that iodine sources and chemistry need to be considered in assessments of the historical and future evolution of the stratospheric ozone layer.


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.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Formaldehyde in the Tropical Western Pacific: Chemical Sources and Sinks, Convective Transport, and Representation in CAM-Chem and the CCMI Models

Daniel C. Anderson; Julie M. Nicely; Glenn M. Wolfe; T. F. Hanisco; R. J. Salawitch; T. Canty; Russell R. Dickerson; Eric C. Apel; Sunil Baidar; Thomas J. Bannan; Nicola J. Blake; Dexian Chen; B. Dix; Rafael P. Fernandez; Samuel R. Hall; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; L. Gregory Huey; B. Josse; Patrick Jöckel; Douglas E. Kinnison; Theodore K. Koenig; Michael Le Breton; Virginie Marécal; Olaf Morgenstern; Luke D. Oman; Laura L. Pan; Carl J. Percival; David A. Plummer; Laura E. Revell; Eugene Rozanov

Formaldehyde (HCHO) directly affects the atmospheric oxidative capacity through its effects on HOx. In remote marine environments, such as the Tropical Western Pacific (TWP), it is particularly important to understand the processes controlling the abundance of HCHO because model output from these regions is used to correct satellite retrievals of HCHO. Here, we have used observations from the CONTRAST field campaign, conducted during January and February 2014, to evaluate our understanding of the processes controlling the distribution of HCHO in the TWP as well as its representation in chemical transport/climate models. Observed HCHO mixing ratios varied from ~500 pptv near the surface to ~75 pptv in the upper troposphere. Recent convective transport of near surface HCHO and its precursors, acetaldehyde and possibly methyl hydroperoxide, increased upper tropospheric HCHO mixing ratios by ~33% (22 pptv); this air contained roughly 60% less NO than more aged air. Output from the CAM-Chem chemistry transport model (2014 meteorology) as well as nine chemistry climate models from the Chemistry-Climate Model Initiative (free-running meteorology) are found to uniformly underestimate HCHO columns derived from in situ observations by between 4 and 50%. This underestimate of HCHO likely results from a near factor of two underestimate of NO in most models, which strongly suggests errors in NOx emissions inventories and/or in the model chemical mechanisms. Likewise, the lack of oceanic acetaldehyde emissions and potential errors in the model acetaldehyde chemistry lead to additional underestimates in modeled HCHO of up to 75 pptv (~15%) in the lower troposphere.


Optics and Photonics for Energy and the Environment | 2017

Maximizing Degrees of Freedom in MAX-DOAS Retrievals of BrO from Remote Tropical Marine Mountaintops

Theodore K. Koenig; B. Dix; F. Hendrick; Michel Van Roozendael; Nicolas Theys; J. Brioude; Jean-Pierre Cammas; R. Volkamer

We are developing sensitive atmospheric vertical profile retrieval capabilities from MAX-DOAS sensors on tropical island mountaintops. Particularly, we target BrO which has significant impacts on the lifetime of greenhouse gases such as O3 and CH4.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

Measurements of the Absorption Cross Section of 13CHO13CHO at Visible Wavelengths and Application to DOAS Retrievals

Natasha R. Goss; Eleanor M. Waxman; Sean Coburn; Theodore K. Koenig; Ryan Thalman; Josef Dommen; James W. Hannigan; Geoffrey S. Tyndall; R. Volkamer

The trace gas glyoxal (CHOCHO) forms from the atmospheric oxidation of hydrocarbons and is a precursor to secondary organic aerosol. We have measured the absorption cross section of disubstituted (13)CHO(13)CHO ((13)C glyoxal) at moderately high (1 cm(-1)) optical resolution between 21 280 and 23 260 cm(-1) (430-470 nm). The isotopic shifts in the position of absorption features were found to be largest near 455 nm (Δν = 14 cm(-1); Δλ = 0.29 nm), whereas no significant shifts were observed near 440 nm (Δν < 0.5 cm(-1); Δλ < 0.01 nm). These shifts are used to investigate the selective detection of (12)C glyoxal (natural isotope abundance) and (13)C glyoxal by in situ cavity enhanced differential optical absorption spectroscopy (CE-DOAS) in a series of sensitivity tests using synthetic spectra, and laboratory measurements of mixtures containing (12)C and (13)C glyoxal, nitrogen dioxide, and other interfering absorbers. We find the changes in apparent spectral band shapes remain significant at the moderately high optical resolution typical of CE-DOAS (0.55 nm fwhm). CE-DOAS allows for the selective online detection of both isotopes with detection limits of ∼200 pptv (1 pptv = 10(-12) volume mixing ratio), and sensitivity toward total glyoxal of few pptv. The (13)C absorption cross section is available for download from the Supporting Information.


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2015

Aircraft Measurements of BrO, IO, Glyoxal, NO2, H2O, O2-O2 and Aerosol Extinction Profiles in the Tropics: Comparison with Aircraft-/Ship-Based in Situ and Lidar Measurements

R. Volkamer; Sunil Baidar; Teresa L. Campos; Sean Coburn; Joshua Digangi; B. Dix; Edwin W. Eloranta; Theodore K. Koenig; Bruce Morley; Ivan Ortega; Bridget R. Pierce; M. Reeves; R. Sinreich; Siyuan Wang; Mark A. Zondlo; Pavel Romashkin


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Global impacts of tropospheric halogens (Cl, Br, I) on oxidants and composition in GEOS-Chem

Tomás Sherwen; Johan A. Schmidt; M. J. Evans; Lucy J. Carpenter; Katja Großmann; Sebastian D. Eastham; Daniel J. Jacob; B. Dix; Theodore K. Koenig; R. Sinreich; Ivan Ortega; R. Volkamer; Alfonso Saiz-Lopez; Cristina Prados-Roman; Anoop S. Mahajan; Carlos Ordóñez


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Iodine's impact on tropospheric oxidants: a global model study in GEOS-Chem

Tomás Sherwen; M. J. Evans; Lucy J. Carpenter; Stephen J. Andrews; Richard T. Lidster; B. Dix; Theodore K. Koenig; R. Sinreich; Ivan Ortega; R. Volkamer; Alfonso Saiz-Lopez; Cristina Prados-Roman; Anoop S. Mahajan; C. Ordóñez

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B. Dix

University of Colorado Boulder

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R. Volkamer

University of Colorado Boulder

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Sunil Baidar

University of Colorado Boulder

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Alfonso Saiz-Lopez

Spanish National Research Council

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Douglas E. Kinnison

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Ivan Ortega

University of Colorado Boulder

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Samuel R. Hall

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Teresa L. Campos

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Eric C. Apel

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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