Authors
AM Middlebrook, C Marcolli, MR Canagaratna, DR Worsnop, R Bahreini, JA de Gouw, C Warneke, PD Goldan, WC Kuster, EJ Williams, BM Lerner, JM Roberts, JF Meagher, FC Fehsenfeld, ML Marchewka, SB Bertman
Publication date
2006/12
Journal
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
Volume
2006
Pages
A12C-06
Description
We applied hierarchical cluster analysis to an Aerodyne aerosol mass spectrometer (AMS) bulk mass spectral dataset collected aboard the NOAA research vessel Ronald H. Brown during the 2002 New England Air Quality Study off the east coast of the United States. Emphasizing the organic peaks, the cluster analysis yielded a series of categories that are distinguishable with respect to their mass spectra and their occurrence as a function of time. The differences between the categories mainly arise from relative intensity changes rather than from the presence or absence of specific peaks. The most frequent category exhibits a strong signal at m/z 44 and represents oxidized organic matter probably originating from both anthropogenic as well as biogenic sources. On the basis of spectral and trace gas correlations, the second most common category with strong signals at m/z 29, 43, and 44 contains contributions …