Korea Polar Data Center
Scientific observations and results from Antarctica shall
be exchanged and made freely available
be exchanged and made freely available
Atmospheric and oceanic Nitrous Oxide: The Southern Ocean in summer 2009/2010
Atmospheric and oceanic nitrous oxide in the marine boundary layer was monitored from November 26, 2010, to January 22, 2011 by the GC 7890A along the cruise track of R/V Polarstern from Punta Arenas, Chile, to Wellington, New Zealand, carrying out the expedition, ANTXXVI/2, in the Southern Ocean. N2O was measured every 40 minutes. As atmospheric nitrous oxide is one of the major green house gases, it is important to understand the degree of influence of it. Although oceanic source doesn't contribute highly, it is required to monitor air-sea flux continuously because the area of the Ocean is large and the flux changes easily according to the chemical and biological conditions.
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- Entry ID
- KOPRI-KPDC-00000396
- KPDC_AONO_ANTARCTIC_2009 (Old ID)
- Science Keyword
- ISO Topic
- CLIMATOLOGY/METEOROLOGY/ATMOSPHERE
- Platforms
- R/V Polarstern(Icebreaker Research Vessel Polarstern)
- Instruments
- GC 7890A(Agilent 7890 Gas Chromatography)
- Personnel
- Tae Siek Rhee (rhee@kopri.re.kr)
- Project
- Research period
- 2009-11-26 ~ 2010-01-20
- Create/Update Date
- 2013-08-06 / 2013-08-06
- Location
- Continent > South America > Chile > Punta Arenas
- Continent > Australia/new Zealand > New Zealand > Wellington
- Dataset
- Atmospheric and oceanic Nitrous Oxide: The Southern Ocean in summer 2009/2010 Southern Ocean and the ecosystem as a reactor of climate gases Tae Siek Rhee
- Citation
- The data(KOPRI-KPDC-00000396) used in this work was provided by the Korea Polar Research Institute.