AIR CLEANSING BY CONVECTIVE STORMS DONALD F. GATZ and A. NELSON DINGLE The University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan ABSTRACT Data relating to rain cleansing of the atmosphere have been gathered throughout five convective rain-producing weather systems and analyzed with respect to the concentrations of radioactivity in sequential sam- ples of rain. For some of the rains, analyses of the pollen content of sequential samples were also made. A consistent pattern of temporal variation of concentration of both contaminants was observed in the three rains of highest rainfall rate. This pattern, a rapid decrease of concentration with time during the first portions of the rain, was absent in the two rains of lowest rainfall rate. The fact that rapid de- creases in concentration occurred simultaneously for both radioactivity and pollens is taken as evidence that both contaminants were removed from the same air. Since pollens have their source at the earth’s surface, it is concluded that both radioactivity and pollens entered the con- vective system from low levels via the convective updraft. It seems possible that the absence of the rapid temporal decrease of concentra- tion in the rains of low intensity may be due to the lack of a persistent, organized updraft in these systems. INTRODUCTION Radiochemical analyses of samples of rainwater collected at fixed ground stations from rain systems of all types have shown substantial time variation of the concentration of radioactive substances in the rain. These variations are present when one rainfallis compared with another (e.g., by Walton, Fisher, and Krey') as well as from sample to sample 566

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