Exploring the Atmosphere of Neoproterozoic Earth: The Effect of O$_{2}$ on Haze Formation and Composition
Sarah M. H\"orst, Chao He, Melissa S. Ugelow, A. Mark, Jellinek, Raymond T. Pierrehumbert, Margaret A. Tolbert

TL;DR
This study experimentally investigates how varying levels of oxygen influence haze particle formation, composition, and properties in early Earth's atmosphere, revealing effects on nucleation, growth, and potential implications for climate and prebiotic chemistry.
Contribution
It provides new experimental data on the impact of oxygen on haze formation and composition in Neoproterozoic Earth-like atmospheres, extending prior studies focused on oxygen-free conditions.
Findings
Oxygen increases particle density and alters composition.
Higher O$_{2}$ levels decrease particle production rate.
Oxygen promotes nitrogen fixation and nitrate formation.
Abstract
Previous studies of haze formation in the atmosphere of the Early Earth have focused on N/CO/CH atmospheres. Here, we experimentally investigate the effect of O on the formation and composition of aerosols to improve our understanding of haze formation on the Neoproterozoic Earth. We obtained in situ size, particle density, and composition measurements of aerosol particles produced from N/CO/CH/O gas mixtures subjected to FUV radiation (115-400 nm) for a range of initial CO/CH/O mixing ratios (O ranging from 2 ppm to 0.2\%). At the lowest O concentration (2 ppm), the addition increased particle production for all but one gas mixture. At higher oxygen concentrations (20 ppm and greater) particles are still produced, but the addition of O decreases the production rate. Both the particle size and number…
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