Shepson, P.B.Bottenheim, J.W.Hastie, D.R.Venkatram, A.2010-05-202010-05-201992Geophys. Res. Lett., 19, 1121-1124http://hdl.handle.net/10315/4120A series of measurements of PAN and ozone was conducted during summer at three rural sites in Canada: Egbert and Dorset, Ontario, and Kejimkujik, Nova Scotia. For nights when a stable surface inversion layer forms, ozone and PAN at the surface are found to undergo first order decay, assumed to be due only to dry deposition. Analysis of the measurement data leads to determination of the relative dry deposition velocities. For all three sites, we find that Vd(O3)/Vd(PAN) = 0.42±0.19, at night. This ratio is roughly a factor of 5–6 times smaller than previously assumed. This smaller relative deposition velocity ratio can have a significant impact on model estimations of PAN concentrations near the surface. We estimate that for these sites, the PAN deposition velocity is at least 0.5 cm/s, and may be greater during daytime. This can have a significant impact on the tropospheric lifetime of PAN.enDetermination of the Relative Ozone and PAN Deposition Velocities at NightArticlehttp://www.agu.org/journals/jd/