Vanessa Rieger
German Aerospace Center
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Featured researches published by Vanessa Rieger.
Geoscientific Model Development | 2017
Vanessa Rieger; Mariano Mertens; Volker Grewe
To mitigate the human impact on climate change, it is essential to determine the contribution of emissions to the concentration of trace gases. In particular, the source attribution of short-lived species such as OH and HO2 is important as they play a crucial role for atmospheric chemistry. This study presents an advanced version of a tagging method for OH and HO2 (HOx) which attributes HOx concentrations to emissions. While the former version (V1.0) only considered 12 reactions in the troposphere, the new version (V1.1), presented here, takes 19 reactions in the troposphere into account. For the first time, the main chemical reactions for the HOx chemistry in the stratosphere are also regarded (in total 27 reactions). To fully take into account the main HO2 source by the reaction of H and O2, the tagging of the H radical is introduced. In order to ensure the steady-state assumption, we introduce rest terms which balance the deviation of HOx production and loss. This closes the budget between the sum of all contributions and the total concentration. The contributions to OH and HO2 obtained by the advanced tagging method V1.1 deviate from V1.0 in certain source categories. For OH, major changes are found in the categories biomass burning, biogenic emissions and methane decomposition. For HO2, the contributions differ strongly in the categories biogenic emissions and methane decomposition. As HOx reacts with ozone (O3), carbon monoxide (CO), reactive nitrogen compounds (NOy), non-methane hydrocarbons (NMHCs) and peroxyacyl nitrates (PAN), the contributions to these species are also modified by the advanced HOx tagging method V1.1. The contributions to NOy , NMHC and PAN show only little change, whereas O3 from biogenic emissions and methane decomposition increases in the tropical troposphere. Variations for CO from biogenic emissions and biomass burning are only found in the Southern Hemisphere.
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017
Mariano Mertens; Volker Grewe; Vanessa Rieger; Patrick Jöckel
Archive | 2018
Robert Sausen; Sabine Brinkop; Björn Brötz; Duy Sinh Cai; Simone Dietmüller; Roland Eichinger; Veronika Eyring; Franziska Frank; Christine Frömming; Hella Garny; Klaus-Dirk Gottschaldt; Phoebe Graf; Volker Grewe; Johannes Hendricks; Patrick Jöckel; Christopher Kaiser; Bastian Kern; Sigrun Matthes; Mariano Mertens; Andreas Pfeiffer; Michael Ponater; Vanessa Rieger; Mattia Righi
Archive | 2018
Mariano Mertens; Astrid Kerkweg; Volker Grewe; Vanessa Rieger; Patrick Jöckel
Archive | 2018
Simone Dietmüller; Michael Ponater; Vanessa Rieger
Archive | 2016
Michael Ponater; Vanessa Rieger; Simone Dietmüller
Archive | 2016
Michael Ponater; Simone Dietmüller; Vanessa Rieger
Archive | 2016
Vanessa Rieger; Volker Grewe
Archive | 2015
Vanessa Rieger; Simone Dietmüller; Michael Ponater
Archive | 2015
Vanessa Rieger; Volker Grewe