Abstract
Because of its ubiquitous release on land and wellcharacterized atmospheric loss, radon-222 has been very useful for deducing fluxes of greenhouse gases such as CO2, CH2, and N2O. It is shown here that the radon-tracer method, used in previous studies to calculate regional-scale greenhouse gas fluxes, returns a weighted-average flux (the flux field F weighted by the sensitivity of the measurements to that flux field, f) rather than an evenly-weighted spatial average flux. A synthetic data study using a Lagrangian particle dispersion model and modeled CO2 fluxes suggests that the discrepancy between the sensitivity-weighted average flux and evenly-weighted spatial average flux can be significant in the case of CO 2, due to covariance between F and / for biospheric CO2 fluxes during the growing season and also for anthropogenic CO2 fluxes in general. A technique is presented to correct the radon-tracer derived fluxes to yield an estimate of evenly-weighted spatial average CO2 fluxes. A new method is also introduced for correcting the CO2 flux estimates for the effects of radon-222 radioactive decay in the radon-tracer method.
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CITATION STYLE
Hirsch, A. I. (2007). On using radon-222 and CO2 to calculate regional-scale CO 2 fluxes. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 7(14), 3737–3747. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-7-3737-2007
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