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Chromophoric Dissolved Organic Matter (CDOM) In Rainwater,Southeastern North Carolina,USA
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Robert?J?KieberEmail author  Robert?F?Whitehead  Seth?N?Reid  Joan?D?Willey  Pamela?J?Seaton
Institution:(1) Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, 28403-5932, North Carolina, USA
Abstract:The abundance and optical characteristics of dissolved organic matter (DOM) were determined in 120 rain samples collected in Wilmington, North Carolina, USA, between February 21, 2002 and August 11, 2003. All rainwater samples contained chromophoric dissolved organic matter (CDOM) as well as fluorescent compounds. The absorbance spectra of CDOM in the samples decreased exponentially with wavelength with little or no measurable absorbance past 550 nm. Fluorescence excitation emission spectra (EEMS) of the precipitation revealed the presence of four major peaks indicating both terrestrial and marine influences. There was a strong positive correlation between total integrated fluorescence and the absorbance coefficient at 300 nm in rainwater samples, suggesting that these optical properties are directly interrelated and that the compounds responsible for absorbance may be the same as those responsible for fluorescence. Air-mass back-trajectory analysis indicated elevated CDOM levels in continentally influenced rainwater relative to marine dominated events implying that anthropogenic and/or terrestrial sources are important contributors to CDOM levels in precipitation. The presence of highly absorbing and fluorescing CDOM in rainwater has significant ramifications in atmospheric chemistry and may play a previously unrecognized role in the wavelength dependent spectral attenuation of solar radiation by atmospheric waters.
Keywords:chromophoric dissolved organic matter  CDOM  rain
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