M. G. LawrenceØystein HovMatthias BeekmannJørgen BrandtHendrik ElbernHenk EskesH. FeichterMasayuki Takigawa2026-03-222026-03-22200510.1071/en05014https://doi.org/10.1071/en05014https://andeanlibrary.org/handle/123456789/48188Citaciones: 29Environmental Context. Meteorological weather—temperature, pressure, wind direction—is familiar to all, and contrasts with meteorological climate in short-term (weather) versus long-term (climate) influence. From the atmospheric chemistry side, the focus has largely been on the chemical climate, the long-term mean concentrations of important trace gases and aerosols. An emerging new focus of study is the chemical weather—the tremendous short-term variability of the atmospheric chemical composition, resulting from the strong influence of meteorological variability, chemical complexity, and regionally and temporally varying emissions.enEnvironmental scienceContext (archaeology)Atmospheric sciencesClimatologyClimate changeMeteorologyTerm (time)Trace gasAtmospheric chemistryThe Chemical Weatherarticle