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Bromoform emission over the Antarctic sea ice

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Bromoform emission over the Antarctic sea ice

Material type
文書・図像類
Author
野村, 大樹ほか
Publisher
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Publication date
2013-11-14
Material Format
Digital
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Note (General):

Bromoform is one of the volatile organic compounds emitted from the ocean surface to the atmosphere, and it is believed to affect ozone depletion in t...

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  • National Institute of Polar Research Repository

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Material Type
文書・図像類
Author/Editor
野村, 大樹
大木, 淳之
G.S., Dieckmann
E., Damm
K., Meiners
田村, 岳史
Nomura, Daiki
Ooki, Atsushi
S. Dieckmann, Gerhard
Damm, Ellen
M. Meiners, Klaus
Tamura, Takeshi
Publication Date
2013-11-14
Publication Date (W3CDTF)
2013-11-14
Alternative Title
南極海の海氷から大気へのブロモホルム放出
Text Language Code
eng
Target Audience
一般
Note (General)
Bromoform is one of the volatile organic compounds emitted from the ocean surface to the atmosphere, and it is believed to affect ozone depletion in the atmosphere through photochemical reactions. While estimates of air−sea flux of bromoform are well examined in open ocean areas, fluxes have rarely been estimated in ice-covered seas, and so far, no observations have been made to evaluate the bromoform flux between the sea ice surface and atmosphere. Here, we present the first direct measurements of the air−sea ice bromoform flux obtained from first-year sea ice off east Antarctica. Measurements were made in early austral spring (September to November 2012) as part of the Sea Ice Physics and Ecosystem Experiment II (SIPEX-2). Vertical profiles of bromoform concentrations in snow and sea ice indicated that high concentrations were mainly found in the bottom of the snow and the surface layers of the sea ice (Figure 1) (including slush and brine) ranging from 281−1360 pM. Sea ice–atmosphere bromoform fluxes measured by the chamber method ranged from +0.3 to +7.5 nmol CHBr3 m–2 day–1 (positive value indicates the emission of the bromoform from ice surface to the atmosphere), and flux values increased with increasing bromoform concentrations at the surface layers (Figure 2). The mean flux estimate (+2.4 nmol CHBr3 m–2 day–1) obtained in this study was consistent with the flux estimate for the ice-free part of the Southern Ocean (+2.6 nmol CHBr3 m–2 day–1; Quack and Wallace, 2003). Our results suggest that the bromoform emitted from the sea ice surface to the atmosphere may account for an important fraction of the global bromine budget.
第4回極域科学シンポジウム個別セッション:[OM] 気水圏11月14日(木) 統計数理研究所 3階セミナー室1(D305)