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Modelling the impact of possible snowpack emissions of O(3P) and NO2 on photochemistry in the South Pole boundary layer

P. D. Hamer A B D , D. E. Shallcross A , A. Yabushita C and M. Kawasaki C
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A School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, Cantock’s Close, Bristol, BS8 1TS, United Kingdom.

B Present address: Jet Propulsion Laboratory – NASA, 4800 Oak Grove Drive, MS 183-601, Pasadena, CA 91109, USA.

C Department of Molecular Engineering, Kyoto University, Kyoto, 615-8510, Japan.

D Corresponding author. Email: paul.d.hamer@jpl.nasa.gov

Environmental Chemistry 5(4) 268-273 https://doi.org/10.1071/EN08022
Submitted: 6 March 2008  Accepted: 27 June 2008   Published: 19 August 2008



4 articles found in Crossref database.

Nitrate Concentration near the Surface of Frozen Aqueous Solutions
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The Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 2014  p.141215120853003
Investigating the photo-oxidative and heterogeneous chemical production of HCHO in the snowpack at the South Pole, Antarctica
Hamer P. D., Shallcross D. E., Yabushita A., Kawasaki M., Marécal V., Boxe C. S.
Environmental Chemistry. 2014 11(4). p.459
The effect of the novel HO2 + NO → HNO3 reaction channel at South Pole, Antarctica
Boxe C.S., Hamer P.D., Ford W., Hoffmann M., Shallcross D.E.
Antarctic Science. 2012 24(4). p.417
Nitrate photolysis in ice and snow: A critical review of its multiphase chemistry
Blaszczak-Boxe Christopher S., Saiz-Lopez Alfonso
Atmospheric Environment. 2018 193 p.224

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