Stratospheric Aerosol Increases and Ozone Destruction: Implications from Mass Spectrometer Measurements
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Berichte der Bunsengesellschaft für physikalische Chemie
- Vol. 96 (3), 339-350
- https://doi.org/10.1002/bbpc.19920960321
Abstract
No abstract availableKeywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- Simultaneous balloonborne measurements of stratospheric water vapor and ozone in the polar regionsGeophysical Research Letters, 1991
- Evidence for stratospheric ozone-depleting heterogeneous chemistry on volcanic aerosols from El ChichónNature, 1990
- Balloon observations of nitric acid aerosol formation in the Arctic stratosphere: I. Gaseous nitric acidGeophysical Research Letters, 1990
- A comparison of ER‐2 measurements of stratospheric water vapor between the 1987 Antarctic and 1989 Arctic airborne missionsGeophysical Research Letters, 1990
- Measurements of stratospheric gaseous nitric acid in the winter Arctic vortex using a novel rocket‐borne mass spectrometric methodGeophysical Research Letters, 1990
- Evidence for stratospheric nitric acid condensation from balloon and rocket measurements in the ArcticNature, 1989
- Stratospheric nitric acid vapour measurements in the cold Arctic vortex: implications for nitric acid condensationNature, 1989
- Laboratory studies of the nitric acid trihydrate: Implications for the south polar stratosphereGeophysical Research Letters, 1988
- Nitric acid cloud formation in the cold Antarctic stratosphere: a major cause for the springtime ‘ozone hole’Nature, 1986
- Condensation of HNO3 and HCl in the winter polar stratospheresGeophysical Research Letters, 1986