Carbon simulation: Difference between revisions

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The carbon simulation combines the chemistry reactions of the [[CH4 simulation|CH4]], [[CO2 simulation|CO2]], and [[Tagged CO simulation|CO]] simulations.  It will eventually replace each of these simulations.
The carbon simulation combines the chemistry reactions of the [[CH4 simulation|CH4]], [[CO2 simulation|CO2]], and [[Tagged CO simulation|CO]] simulations.  It will eventually replace each of these simulations.
To view the mechanism definition, [https://github.com/geoschem/geos-chem/blob/main/KPP/carbon/carbon.eqn please follow this link].


== References ==
== References ==


* Bukosa, B., Fisher, J., Deutscher, N., and Jones, D. <em>A Coupled CH4, CO and CO2 Simulation for Improved Chemical Source Modelling</em>. <u>Atmosphere</u>, 14:764, 2023. [https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos14050764 DOI: 10.3390/atmos14050764]
* Bukosa, B., Fisher, J., Deutscher, N., and Jones, D. <em>A Coupled CH4, CO and CO2 Simulation for Improved Chemical Source Modelling</em>. <u>Atmosphere</u>, 14:764, 2023. [https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos14050764 DOI: 10.3390/atmos14050764]

Revision as of 14:52, 21 May 2024

Overview

The carbon simulation combines the chemistry reactions of the CH4, CO2, and CO simulations. It will eventually replace each of these simulations.

To view the mechanism definition, please follow this link.

References

  • Bukosa, B., Fisher, J., Deutscher, N., and Jones, D. A Coupled CH4, CO and CO2 Simulation for Improved Chemical Source Modelling. Atmosphere, 14:764, 2023. DOI: 10.3390/atmos14050764