Designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and 10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the K-Pg impact
About 66 million years ago, an asteroid about 10 km in diameter struck the Yucatan Peninsula creating the Chicxulub crater. The crater has been dated and found to be coincident with the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction event, one of six great mass extinctions in the last 600 million y...
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Copernicus Publications
2016-10-01
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Article |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
O. B. Toon C. Bardeen R. Garcia |
spellingShingle |
O. B. Toon C. Bardeen R. Garcia Designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and 10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the K-Pg impact Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
author_facet |
O. B. Toon C. Bardeen R. Garcia |
author_sort |
O. B. Toon |
title |
Designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and
10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the K-Pg
impact |
title_short |
Designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and
10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the K-Pg
impact |
title_full |
Designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and
10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the K-Pg
impact |
title_fullStr |
Designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and
10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the K-Pg
impact |
title_full_unstemmed |
Designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and
10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the K-Pg
impact |
title_sort |
designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and
10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the k-pg
impact |
publisher |
Copernicus Publications |
series |
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
issn |
1680-7316 1680-7324 |
publishDate |
2016-10-01 |
description |
About 66 million years ago, an asteroid about 10 km in diameter struck the
Yucatan Peninsula creating the Chicxulub crater. The crater has been dated
and found to be coincident with the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K-Pg) mass
extinction event, one of six great mass extinctions in the last
600 million years. This event precipitated one of the largest episodes of
rapid climate change in Earth's history, yet no modern three-dimensional
climate calculations have simulated the event. Similarly, while there is an
ongoing effort to detect asteroids that might hit Earth and to develop
methods to stop them, there have been no modern calculations of the sizes of
asteroids whose impacts on land would cause devastating effects on Earth.
Here, we provide the information needed to initialize such calculations for
the K-Pg impactor and for a 1 km diameter impactor.<br><br>
There is considerable controversy about the details of the events that
followed the Chicxulub impact. We proceed through the data record in the
order of confidence that a climatically important material was present in the
atmosphere. The climatic importance is roughly proportional to the optical
depth of the material. Spherules with diameters of several hundred microns
are found globally in an abundance that would have produced an atmospheric
layer with an optical depth around 20, yet their large sizes would only allow them to stay airborne for
a few days. They were likely important for triggering global wildfires. Soot,
probably from global or near-global wildfires, is found globally in an
abundance that would have produced an optical depth near
100, which would
effectively prevent sunlight from reaching the surface. Nanometer-sized iron
particles are also present globally. Theory suggests these particles might be
remnants of the vaporized asteroid and target that initially remained as
vapor rather than condensing on the hundred-micron spherules when they
entered the atmosphere. If present in the greatest abundance allowed by
theory, their optical depth would have exceeded 1000. Clastics may be present globally, but only
the quartz fraction can be quantified since shock features can identify it.
However, it is very difficult to determine the total abundance of clastics.
We reconcile previous widely disparate estimates and suggest the clastics may
have had an optical depth near 100. Sulfur is predicted to originate about equally from the
impactor and from the Yucatan surface materials. By mass, sulfur is less than
10 % of the observed mass of the spheres and estimated mass of
nanoparticles. Since the sulfur probably reacted on the surfaces of the soot,
nanoparticles, clastics, and spheres, it is likely a minor component of the
climate forcing; however, detailed studies of the conversion of sulfur gases
to particles are needed to determine if sulfuric acid aerosols dominated in
late stages of the evolution of the atmospheric debris. Numerous gases,
including CO<sub>2</sub>, SO<sub>2</sub> (or SO<sub>3</sub>), H<sub>2</sub>O, CO<sub>2</sub>, Cl, Br, and
I, were likely injected into the upper atmosphere by the impact or the
immediate effects of the impact such as fires across the planet. Their
abundance might have increased relative to current ambient values by a
significant fraction for CO<sub>2</sub>, and by factors of 100 to 1000 for the
other gases.<br><br>
For the 1 km impactor, nanoparticles might have had an optical depth of 1.5
if the impact occurred on land. If the impactor struck a densely forested
region, soot from the forest fires might have had an optical depth of 0.1.
Only S and I would be expected to be perturbed significantly relative to
ambient gas-phase values. One kilometer asteroids impacting the ocean may
inject seawater into the stratosphere as well as halogens that are dissolved
in the seawater.<br><br>
For each of the materials mentioned, we provide initial abundances and
injection altitudes. For particles, we suggest initial size distributions and
optical constants. We also suggest new observations that could be made to
narrow the uncertainties about the particles and gases generated by large
impacts. |
url |
https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/16/13185/2016/acp-16-13185-2016.pdf |
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AT obtoon designingglobalclimateandatmosphericchemistrysimulationsfor1and10kmdiameterasteroidimpactsusingthepropertiesofejectafromthekpgimpact AT cbardeen designingglobalclimateandatmosphericchemistrysimulationsfor1and10kmdiameterasteroidimpactsusingthepropertiesofejectafromthekpgimpact AT rgarcia designingglobalclimateandatmosphericchemistrysimulationsfor1and10kmdiameterasteroidimpactsusingthepropertiesofejectafromthekpgimpact |
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doaj-031363983b5f44f280e42e22bf57c27f2020-11-24T23:31:15ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242016-10-0116131851321210.5194/acp-16-13185-2016Designing global climate and atmospheric chemistry simulations for 1 and 10 km diameter asteroid impacts using the properties of ejecta from the K-Pg impactO. B. Toon0C. Bardeen1R. Garcia2Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Science, Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO, USANational Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, USANational Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, CO, USAAbout 66 million years ago, an asteroid about 10 km in diameter struck the Yucatan Peninsula creating the Chicxulub crater. The crater has been dated and found to be coincident with the Cretaceous–Paleogene (K-Pg) mass extinction event, one of six great mass extinctions in the last 600 million years. This event precipitated one of the largest episodes of rapid climate change in Earth's history, yet no modern three-dimensional climate calculations have simulated the event. Similarly, while there is an ongoing effort to detect asteroids that might hit Earth and to develop methods to stop them, there have been no modern calculations of the sizes of asteroids whose impacts on land would cause devastating effects on Earth. Here, we provide the information needed to initialize such calculations for the K-Pg impactor and for a 1 km diameter impactor.<br><br> There is considerable controversy about the details of the events that followed the Chicxulub impact. We proceed through the data record in the order of confidence that a climatically important material was present in the atmosphere. The climatic importance is roughly proportional to the optical depth of the material. Spherules with diameters of several hundred microns are found globally in an abundance that would have produced an atmospheric layer with an optical depth around 20, yet their large sizes would only allow them to stay airborne for a few days. They were likely important for triggering global wildfires. Soot, probably from global or near-global wildfires, is found globally in an abundance that would have produced an optical depth near 100, which would effectively prevent sunlight from reaching the surface. Nanometer-sized iron particles are also present globally. Theory suggests these particles might be remnants of the vaporized asteroid and target that initially remained as vapor rather than condensing on the hundred-micron spherules when they entered the atmosphere. If present in the greatest abundance allowed by theory, their optical depth would have exceeded 1000. Clastics may be present globally, but only the quartz fraction can be quantified since shock features can identify it. However, it is very difficult to determine the total abundance of clastics. We reconcile previous widely disparate estimates and suggest the clastics may have had an optical depth near 100. Sulfur is predicted to originate about equally from the impactor and from the Yucatan surface materials. By mass, sulfur is less than 10 % of the observed mass of the spheres and estimated mass of nanoparticles. Since the sulfur probably reacted on the surfaces of the soot, nanoparticles, clastics, and spheres, it is likely a minor component of the climate forcing; however, detailed studies of the conversion of sulfur gases to particles are needed to determine if sulfuric acid aerosols dominated in late stages of the evolution of the atmospheric debris. Numerous gases, including CO<sub>2</sub>, SO<sub>2</sub> (or SO<sub>3</sub>), H<sub>2</sub>O, CO<sub>2</sub>, Cl, Br, and I, were likely injected into the upper atmosphere by the impact or the immediate effects of the impact such as fires across the planet. Their abundance might have increased relative to current ambient values by a significant fraction for CO<sub>2</sub>, and by factors of 100 to 1000 for the other gases.<br><br> For the 1 km impactor, nanoparticles might have had an optical depth of 1.5 if the impact occurred on land. If the impactor struck a densely forested region, soot from the forest fires might have had an optical depth of 0.1. Only S and I would be expected to be perturbed significantly relative to ambient gas-phase values. One kilometer asteroids impacting the ocean may inject seawater into the stratosphere as well as halogens that are dissolved in the seawater.<br><br> For each of the materials mentioned, we provide initial abundances and injection altitudes. For particles, we suggest initial size distributions and optical constants. We also suggest new observations that could be made to narrow the uncertainties about the particles and gases generated by large impacts.https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/16/13185/2016/acp-16-13185-2016.pdf |