⇐ ⇒

[CF-metadata] Standard name proposal related to methane, water vapor, carbon monoxide, semi-heavy water, and nitrogen dioxide.

From: Maarten Sneep <maarten.sneep>
Date: Fri, 6 Apr 2018 14:00:01 +0200

Hi,

I haven't heard anything after sending this in. Can these names be considered for
inclusion in the standard_name list?

Kind regards,

Maarten Sneep

On 23/02/18 15:04, Maarten Sneep wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'd like to propose the following standard names:
>
> * atmosphere_mole_content_of_methane
> * atmosphere_mole_content_of_water_vapor
> * atmosphere_mole_content_of_carbon_monoxide
> * atmosphere_mole_content_of_semiheavy_water_vapor
> * atmosphere_mole_content_of_nitrogen_dioxide
>
> Details are provided below.
>
> atmosphere_mole_content_of_methane
> Canonical units: mol/m2
> Description: "Content" indicates a quantity per unit area. The "atmosphere content"
> of a quantity refers to the vertical integral from the surface to the top of the
> atmosphere. For the content between specified levels in the atmosphere, standard
> names including "content_of_atmosphere_layer" are used. The construction
> "atmosphere_mole_content_of_X" means the vertically integrated number of moles of X
> above a unit area. The chemical formula for methane is CH4. Methane is a member of
> the group of hydrocarbons known as alkanes. There are standard names for the alkane
> group as well as for some of the individual species.
>
> (References: atmosphere_mass_content_of_methane, atmosphere_mole_content_of_ozone;
> for ozone both mole content and mass content exist).
>
>
> atmosphere_column_average_mole_fraction_of_methane_in_dry_air
> Canonical units: 1
>
>
> atmosphere_mole_content_of_water_vapor
> Canonical units: mol/m2
> Description: "Content" indicates a quantity per unit area. The "atmosphere content"
> of a quantity refers to the vertical integral from the surface to the top of the
> atmosphere. For the content between specified levels in the atmosphere, standard
> names including "content_of_atmosphere_layer" are used. The construction
> "atmosphere_mole_content_of_X" means the vertically integrated number of moles of X
> above a unit area. The chemical formula for water is H2O. Atmosphere water vapor
> content is sometimes referred to as "precipitable water", although this term does not
> imply the water could all be precipitated.
>
> (References: atmosphere_mass_content_of_water_vapor,
> atmosphere_mole_content_of_ozone; for ozone both mole content and mass content exist).
>
>
> atmosphere_mole_content_of_carbon_monoxide
> Canonical units: mol/m2
> Description: "Content" indicates a quantity per unit area. The "atmosphere content"
> of a quantity refers to the vertical integral from the surface to the top of the
> atmosphere. For the content between specified levels in the atmosphere, standard
> names including "content_of_atmosphere_layer" are used. The construction
> "atmosphere_mole_content_of_X" means the vertically integrated number of moles of X
> above a unit area. The chemical formula for carbon monoxide is CO.
>
> (References: atmosphere_mass_content_of_carbon_monoxide,
> atmosphere_mole_content_of_ozone; for ozone both mole content and mass content exist).
>
>
> atmosphere_mole_content_of_semiheavy_water_vapor
> Canonical units: mol/m2
> Description: "Content" indicates a quantity per unit area. The "atmosphere content"
> of a quantity refers to the vertical integral from the surface to the top of the
> atmosphere. For the content between specified levels in the atmosphere, standard
> names including "content_of_atmosphere_layer" are used. The construction
> "atmosphere_mole_content_of_X" means the vertically integrated number of moles of X
> above a unit area. The chemical formula for semi-heavy water is HDO, water with one
> hydrogen replaced by deuterium.
>
> Note: This one is tricky, HDO is not D2O, so the correct term is not heavy water.
> Open for suggestions here.
>
>
> atmosphere_mole_content_of_nitrogen_dioxide
> Canonical units: mol/m2
> Description: "Content" indicates a quantity per unit area. The "atmosphere content"
> of a quantity refers to the vertical integral from the surface to the top of the
> atmosphere. For the content between specified levels in the atmosphere, standard
> names including "content_of_atmosphere_layer" are used. The construction
> "atmosphere_mole_content_of_X" means the vertically integrated number of moles of X
> above a unit area. The chemical formula for nitrogen_dioxide is NO2.
>
> (References: troposphere_mole_content_of_nitrogen_dioxide,
> stratosphere_mole_content_of_nitrogen_dioxide).
Received on Fri Apr 06 2018 - 06:00:01 BST

This archive was generated by hypermail 2.3.0 : Tue Sep 13 2022 - 23:02:42 BST

⇐ ⇒