Distribution and fate of methane released from submarine sources - Results of measurements using an improved in situ mass spectrometer


Contact
Torben.Gentz [ at ] awi.de

Abstract

Methane (CH4) is the most frequent organic compound in the atmosphere and its influence on the global climate is subject of currently conducted scientific discussion. One source of atmospheric methane is the release of CH4 from the oceans seafloor. These submarine sources are characterized by rising gas bubbles or diffusive methane flux into the water column. Due to the limited number of samples taken by conventional ex situ methods, an accurate quantification of the methane distribution could hardly be estimated. With the help of an optimized mass spectrometer (UWMS, Inspectr200-200, Applied Microsystems Limited™) it became possible for the first time to obtain distribution patterns of dissolved CH4 in the water column in high resolution. In this talk I will present the detection, mapping and inventory calculation of submarine released methane by novel in situ mass spectrometry as well as the study of relevant pathways and its potential contribution to the atmospheric methane budget.



Item Type
Conference (Talk)
Authors
Divisions
Primary Division
Programs
Primary Topic
Peer revision
Not peer-reviewed
Publication Status
Published
Event Details
S e m i n a r, 02 Sep 2013 - 02 Sep 2013, Syddansk Universitet Institute of Biology, Denmark.
Eprint ID
39250
Cite as
Gentz, T. (2013): Distribution and fate of methane released from submarine sources - Results of measurements using an improved in situ mass spectrometer , S e m i n a r, Syddansk Universitet Institute of Biology, Denmark, 2 September 2013 - 2 September 2013 .


Download
[thumbnail of Uni_odense_tgentz_2013.pdf]
Preview
PDF
Uni_odense_tgentz_2013.pdf

Download (6MB) | Preview
Cite this document as:

Share

Geographical region
N/A

Research Platforms
N/A

Campaigns
N/A


Actions
Edit Item Edit Item