Abstract
Abstract. Meteoric ablation produces layers of metal atoms in the
mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT). It has been known for more than 30 years that the Ca atom layer is depleted by over 2 orders of magnitude
compared with Na, despite these elements having nearly the same
elemental abundance in chondritic meteorites. In contrast, the Ca+ ion
abundance is depleted by less than a factor of 10. To explain these
observations, a large database of neutral and ion–molecule reaction
kinetics of Ca species, measured over the past decade, was incorporated into
the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM). A new meteoric input
function for Ca and Na, derived using a chemical ablation model that has
been tested experimentally with a Meteoric Ablation Simulator, shows that Ca
ablates almost 1 order of magnitude less efficiently than Na. WACCM-Ca
simulates the seasonal Ca layer satisfactorily when compared with lidar
observations, but tends to overestimate Ca+ measurements made by rocket
mass spectrometry and lidar. A key finding is that CaOH and CaCO3 are
very stable reservoir species because they are involved in essentially
closed reaction cycles with O2 and O. This has been demonstrated
experimentally for CaOH, and in this study for CaCO3 using electronic
structure and statistical rate theory. Most of the neutral Ca is therefore
locked in these reservoirs, enabling rapid loss through polymerization into
meteoric smoke particles, and this explains the extreme depletion of Ca.
Funder
FP7 Ideas: European Research Council
Cited by
20 articles.
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