Formaldehyde and Glyoxal Measurements as Tracers of Oxidation Chemistry in the Amazon Basin
Mitchell P Thayer1, Matthew Ryan Dorris2, Frank N Keutsch3, Stephen R. Springston4, Jose L Jimenez5, Brett B Palm6, Roger Seco7, Saewung Kim8, Lindsay Yee9, Rebecca Ann Wernis10, Allen H Goldstein11, Gabriel A Isaacman-VanWertz10, Yingjun Liu12 and Scot T Martin13, (1)University of Wisconsin Madison, Chemistry, Madison, WI, United States, (2)University of Wisconsin Madison, Madison, WI, United States, (3)Harvard University, School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology and Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Cambridge, MA, United States, (4)Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY, United States, (5)Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States, (6)University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, United States, (7)University of California Irvine, Irvine, CA, United States, (8)University of California Irvine, Department of Earth System Science, Irvine, CA, United States, (9)University of California Berkeley, Department of Environmental Science, Policy, & Management, Berkeley, CA, United States, (10)University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, United States, (11)University of California Berkeley, Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Berkeley, United States, (12)Harvard University, Cambridge, United States, (13)Harvard University, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Cambridge, MA, United States