Cosmic ray modulation of infra-red radiation in the atmosphere

Cosmic rays produce molecular cluster ions as they pass through the lower atmosphere. Neutral molecular clusters such as dimers and complexes are expected to make a small contribution to the radiative balance, but atmospheric absorption by charged clusters has not hitherto been observed. In an atmos...

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Main Authors: Aplin, K, Lockwood, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Institute of Physics Publishing 2013
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author Aplin, K
Lockwood, M
author_facet Aplin, K
Lockwood, M
author_sort Aplin, K
collection OXFORD
description Cosmic rays produce molecular cluster ions as they pass through the lower atmosphere. Neutral molecular clusters such as dimers and complexes are expected to make a small contribution to the radiative balance, but atmospheric absorption by charged clusters has not hitherto been observed. In an atmospheric experiment, a narrowband thermopile filter radiometer centred on 9.15 μm, an absorption band previously associated with infra-red absorption of molecular cluster ions, was used to monitor changes following events identified by a cosmic ray telescope sensitive to high-energy (>400 MeV) particles, principally muons. The average change in longwave radiation in this absorption band due to molecular cluster ions is 7 mWm-2. The integrated atmospheric energy density for each event is 2 Jm-2, representing an amplification factor of 1012 compared to the estimated energy density of a typical air shower. This absorption is expected to occur continuously and globally, but calculations suggest that it has only a small effect on climate. © 2013 IOP Publishing Ltd.
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spelling oxford-uuid:4285607f-3cd8-4054-ab0b-ad2f8ed0aac62022-03-26T14:50:05ZCosmic ray modulation of infra-red radiation in the atmosphereJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:4285607f-3cd8-4054-ab0b-ad2f8ed0aac6EnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordInstitute of Physics Publishing2013Aplin, KLockwood, MCosmic rays produce molecular cluster ions as they pass through the lower atmosphere. Neutral molecular clusters such as dimers and complexes are expected to make a small contribution to the radiative balance, but atmospheric absorption by charged clusters has not hitherto been observed. In an atmospheric experiment, a narrowband thermopile filter radiometer centred on 9.15 μm, an absorption band previously associated with infra-red absorption of molecular cluster ions, was used to monitor changes following events identified by a cosmic ray telescope sensitive to high-energy (>400 MeV) particles, principally muons. The average change in longwave radiation in this absorption band due to molecular cluster ions is 7 mWm-2. The integrated atmospheric energy density for each event is 2 Jm-2, representing an amplification factor of 1012 compared to the estimated energy density of a typical air shower. This absorption is expected to occur continuously and globally, but calculations suggest that it has only a small effect on climate. © 2013 IOP Publishing Ltd.
spellingShingle Aplin, K
Lockwood, M
Cosmic ray modulation of infra-red radiation in the atmosphere
title Cosmic ray modulation of infra-red radiation in the atmosphere
title_full Cosmic ray modulation of infra-red radiation in the atmosphere
title_fullStr Cosmic ray modulation of infra-red radiation in the atmosphere
title_full_unstemmed Cosmic ray modulation of infra-red radiation in the atmosphere
title_short Cosmic ray modulation of infra-red radiation in the atmosphere
title_sort cosmic ray modulation of infra red radiation in the atmosphere
work_keys_str_mv AT aplink cosmicraymodulationofinfraredradiationintheatmosphere
AT lockwoodm cosmicraymodulationofinfraredradiationintheatmosphere