Dear All,

I have been reviewing the remaining biogeochemistry standard name proposals for 
the CMIP6 OMIP experiment. Names that were previously accepted have already 
been published in the standard name table. I have now accepted some more names 
and these have been included in this week's standard name table update.

Many discussion points have been resolved but there is one outstanding 
question, affecting over 50 proposals, regarding whether some quantities need 
new 'sea_surface' names or whether they should be treated as full 3D 
quantities. Please see section 4 below for further details. If we can reach a 
decision on this point then I think many more of the remaining biogeochemistry 
proposals can be quickly resolved.

This is a rather lengthy email as I've tried to cover all the outstanding 
issues in one go. (I am aware of the thread discussing "Silicate vs. dissolved 
inorganic silicon" and will address that separately. I will also post 
separately regarding the physics standard name proposals for OMIP).

1. tendency_of_ocean_mole_content_of_[in]organic_carbon names
The discussion established that these names refer to 'total' carbon, i.e. both 
dissolved and particulate. Also, one or two of the names had been listed 
incorrectly - the names referring to sedimentation should not also include 
runoff. This has now been corrected. The names are now as follows:

tendency_of_ocean_mole_content_of_inorganic_carbon, mol m-2 s-1
' "tendency_of_X" means derivative of X with respect to time. "Content" 
indicates a quantity per unit area. "Inorganic carbon" describes a family of 
chemical species and is the term used in standard names for all species 
belonging to the family that are represented within a given model. The list of 
individual species that are included in a quantity having a group chemical 
standard name can vary between models. Where possible, the data variable should 
be accompanied by a complete description of the species represented, for 
example, by using a comment attribute.'

tendency_of_ocean_mole_content_of_inorganic_carbon_due_to_runoff_and_sediment_dissolution,
 mol m-2 s-1
' "tendency_of_X" means derivative of X with respect to time. "Content" 
indicates a quantity per unit area. "Inorganic carbon" describes a family of 
chemical species and is the term used in standard names for all species 
belonging to the family that are represented within a given model. The list of 
individual species that are included in a quantity having a group chemical 
standard name can vary between models. Where possible, the data variable should 
be accompanied by a complete description of the species represented, for 
example, by using a comment attribute. The specification of a physical process 
by the phrase "due_to_" process means that the quantity named is a single term 
in a sum of terms which together compose the general quantity named by omitting 
the phrase. Runoff is the liquid water which drains from land. If not 
specified, "runoff" refers to the sum of surface runoff and subsurface 
drainage.'

tendency_of_ocean_mole_content_of_inorganic_carbon_due_to_sedimentation, mol 
m-2 s-1
' "tendency_of_X" means derivative of X with respect to time. "Content" 
indicates a quantity per unit area. "Inorganic carbon" describes a family of 
chemical species and is the term used in standard names for all species 
belonging to the family that are represented within a given model. The list of 
individual species that are included in a quantity having a group chemical 
standard name can vary between models. Where possible, the data variable should 
be accompanied by a complete description of the species represented, for 
example, by using a comment attribute. The specification of a physical process 
by the phrase "due_to_" process means that the quantity named is a single term 
in a sum of terms which together compose the general quantity named by omitting 
the phrase. "Sedimentation" is the sinking of particulate matter to the floor 
of a body of water.'

tendency_of_ocean_mole_content_of_organic_carbon_due_to_runoff_and_sediment_dissolution,
 mol m-2 s-1
' "tendency_of_X" means derivative of X with respect to time. "Content" 
indicates a quantity per unit area. "Organic carbon" describes a family of 
chemical species and is the term used in standard names for all species 
belonging to the family that are represented within a given model. The list of 
individual species that are included in a quantity having a group chemical 
standard name can vary between models. Where possible, the data variable should 
be accompanied by a complete description of the species represented, for 
example, by using a comment attribute. The specification of a physical process 
by the phrase "due_to_" process means that the quantity named is a single term 
in a sum of terms which together compose the general quantity named by omitting 
the phrase. Runoff is the liquid water which drains from land. If not 
specified, "runoff" refers to the sum of surface runoff and subsurface 
drainage.'

tendency_of_ocean_mole_content_of_organic_carbon_due_to_sedimentation, mol m-2 
s-1
' "tendency_of_X" means derivative of X with respect to time. "Content" 
indicates a quantity per unit area. "Organic carbon" describes a family of 
chemical species and is the term used in standard names for all species 
belonging to the family that are represented within a given model. The list of 
individual species that are included in a quantity having a group chemical 
standard name can vary between models. Where possible, the data variable should 
be accompanied by a complete description of the species represented, for 
example, by using a comment attribute. The specification of a physical process 
by the phrase "due_to_" process means that the quantity named is a single term 
in a sum of terms which together compose the general quantity named by omitting 
the phrase. "Sedimentation" is the sinking of particulate matter to the floor 
of a body of water.'

These five names are accepted and have been included in this week's standard 
name table update.

2. Natural/abiotic names

We have had an extended discussion on both the wording and the definitions of 
these names. We have now reached agreement on names of the form
mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_carbon_natural_analogue_in_sea_water
mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_carbon_abiotic_analogue_in_sea_water
in which the 'analogue' names are effectively part of the description of the 
chemical species.

The corresponding definitions for the two above examples are as follows:
mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_carbon_natural_analogue_in_sea_water, 
mol m-3
'Mole concentration means number of moles per unit volume, also called 
"molarity", and is used in the construction "mole_concentration_of_X_in_Y", 
where X is a material constituent of Y. A chemical or biological species 
denoted by X may be described by a single term such as "nitrogen" or a phrase 
such as "nox_expressed_as_nitrogen". In ocean biogeochemistry models, a 
"natural analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable of 
imposing preindustrial atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, even when the 
model as a whole may be subjected to varying forcings. "Dissolved inorganic 
carbon" describes a family of chemical species in solution, including carbon 
dioxide, carbonic acid and the carbonate and bicarbonate anions. "Dissolved 
inorganic carbon" is the term used in standard names for all species belonging 
to the family that are represented within a given model. The list of individual 
species that are included in a quantity having a group chemical standard name 
can va
 ry between models. Where possible, the data variable should be accompanied by 
a complete description of the species represented, for example, by using a 
comment attribute.'

mole_concentration_of_dissolved_inorganic_carbon_abiotic_analogue_in_sea_water, 
mol m-3
'Mole concentration means number of moles per unit volume, also called 
"molarity", and is used in the construction "mole_concentration_of_X_in_Y", 
where X is a material constituent of Y. A chemical or biological species 
denoted by X may be described by a single term such as "nitrogen" or a phrase 
such as "nox_expressed_as_nitrogen". In ocean biogeochemistry models, an 
"abiotic analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable when 
biological effects on ocean carbon concentration and alkalinity are ignored. 
"Dissolved inorganic carbon" describes a family of chemical species in 
solution, including carbon dioxide, carbonic acid and the carbonate and 
bicarbonate anions. "Dissolved inorganic carbon" is the term used in standard 
names for all species belonging to the family that are represented within a 
given model. The list of individual species that are included in a quantity 
having a group chemical standard name can vary between models. Where possible, 
the data variable sh
 ould be accompanied by a complete description of the species represented, for 
example, by using a comment attribute.'

These two names are accepted and have been included in this week's standard 
name table update.

Following this pattern we then also have the following names:

mole_concentration_of_carbonate_abiotic_analogue_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water,
 mol m-3
'Mole concentration means number of moles per unit volume, also called 
"molarity", and is used in the construction "mole_concentration_of_X_in_Y", 
where X is a material constituent of Y. A chemical or biological species 
denoted by X may be described by a single term such as "nitrogen" or a phrase 
such as "nox_expressed_as_nitrogen". In ocean biogeochemistry models, an 
"abiotic analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable when 
biological effects on ocean carbon concentration and alkalinity are ignored. 
"Dissolved inorganic carbon" describes a family of chemical species in 
solution, including carbon dioxide, carbonic acid and the carbonate and 
bicarbonate anions. "Dissolved inorganic carbon" is the term used in standard 
names for all species belonging to the family that are represented within a 
given model. The list of individual species that are included in a quantity 
having a group chemical standard name can vary between models. Where possible, 
the data variable sh
 ould be accompanied by a complete description of the species represented, for 
example, by using a comment attribute.'
(Previously this one was 
mole_concentration_of_abiotic_carbonate_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water)

mole_concentration_of_carbonate_natural_analogue_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water,
 mol m-3
'Mole concentration means number of moles per unit volume, also called 
"molarity", and is used in the construction "mole_concentration_of_X_in_Y", 
where X is a material constituent of Y. A chemical or biological species 
denoted by X may be described by a single term such as "nitrogen" or a phrase 
such as "nox_expressed_as_nitrogen". In ocean biogeochemistry models, a 
"natural analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable of 
imposing preindustrial atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, even when the 
model as a whole may be subjected to varying forcings. The phrase 
"expressed_as" is used in the construction A_expressed_as_B, where B is a 
chemical constituent of A. It means that the quantity indicated by the standard 
name is calculated solely with respect to the B contained in A, neglecting all 
other chemical constituents of A. The chemical formula of the carbonate anion 
is CO3 with an electrical charge of minus two.'
(This one was previously 
mole_concentration_of_natural_carbonate_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water).

surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon_dioxide_abiotic_analogue_expressed_as_carbon,
 kg m-2 s-1
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. 
"Downward" indicates a vector component which is positive when directed 
downward (negative upward). In accordance with common usage in geophysical 
disciplines, "flux" implies per unit area, called "flux density" in physics. In 
ocean biogeochemistry models, an "abiotic analogue" is used to simulate the 
effect on a modelled variable when biological effects on ocean carbon 
concentration and alkalinity are ignored. The phrase "expressed_as" is used in 
the construction A_expressed_as_B, where B is a chemical constituent of A. It 
means that the quantity indicated by the standard name is calculated solely 
with respect to the B contained in A, neglecting all other chemical 
constituents of A. The chemical formula for carbon dioxide is CO2.'
(Previously this one was 
surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon_dioxide_expressed_as_carbon_due_to_abiotic_component)

surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon_dioxide_natural_analogue_expressed_as_carbon,
 kg m-2 s-1
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. 
"Downward" indicates a vector component which is positive when directed 
downward (negative upward). In accordance with common usage in geophysical 
disciplines, "flux" implies per unit area, called "flux density" in physics. In 
ocean biogeochemistry models, a "natural analogue" is used to simulate the 
effect on a modelled variable of imposing preindustrial atmospheric carbon 
dioxide concentrations, even when the model as a whole may be subjected to 
varying forcings. The phrase "expressed_as" is used in the construction 
A_expressed_as_B, where B is a chemical constituent of A. It means that the 
quantity indicated by the standard name is calculated solely with respect to 
the B contained in A, neglecting all other chemical constituents of A. The 
chemical formula for carbon dioxide is CO2.'
(This one was previously 
surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon_dioxide_expressed_as_carbon_due_to_natural_component).

These four names are accepted and have been included in this week's standard 
name table update.

We have also discussed and agreed that the analogue syntax can be applied to 
carbon dioxide partial pressure names. It was pointed out that the definitions 
should contain a sentence explaining the meaning of partial pressure in sea 
water. For the partial pressure difference names I have added a sentence about 
the sign convention. There are four partial pressure names:

surface_partial_pressure_of_carbon_dioxide_natural_analogue_in_sea_water, Pa
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. The 
chemical formula for carbon dioxide is CO2. In ocean biogeochemistry models, a 
"natural analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable of 
imposing preindustrial atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, even when the 
model as a whole may be subjected to varying forcings. The partial pressure of 
a dissolved gas in sea water is the partial pressure in air with which it would 
be in equilibrium. The partial pressure of a gaseous constituent of air is the 
pressure which it alone would exert with unchanged temperature and number of 
moles per unit volume.'
(This one was previously 
surface_partial_pressure_of_carbon_dioxide_in_sea_water_due_to_natural_component).

surface_partial_pressure_of_carbon_dioxide_abiotic_analogue_in_sea_water, Pa
' The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. The 
chemical formula for carbon dioxide is CO2. In ocean biogeochemistry models, an 
"abiotic analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable when 
biological effects on ocean carbon concentration and alkalinity are ignored. 
The partial pressure of a dissolved gas in sea water is the partial pressure in 
air with which it would be in equilibrium. The partial pressure of a gaseous 
constituent of air is the pressure which it alone would exert with unchanged 
temperature and number of moles per unit volume.'
(This one was previously 
surface_partial_pressure_of_carbon_dioxide_in_sea_water_due_to_abiotic_component).

surface_carbon_dioxide_natural_analogue_partial_pressure_difference_between_sea_water_and_air,
 Pa
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. The 
chemical formula for carbon dioxide is CO2. In ocean biogeochemistry models, a 
"natural analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable of 
imposing preindustrial atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, even when the 
model as a whole may be subjected to varying forcings. The partial pressure of 
a gaseous constituent of air is the pressure which it alone would exert with 
unchanged temperature and number of moles per unit volume. The partial pressure 
of a dissolved gas in sea water is the partial pressure in air with which it 
would be in equilibrium. The partial pressure difference between sea water and 
air is positive when the partial pressure of the dissolved gas in sea water is 
greater than the partial pressure in air.'
(This one was previously 
surface_carbon_dioxide_partial_pressure_difference_between_sea_water_and_air_due_to_natural_component).

surface_carbon_dioxide_abiotic_analogue_partial_pressure_difference_between_sea_water_and_air,
 Pa
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. The 
chemical formula for carbon dioxide is CO2. In ocean biogeochemistry models, an 
"abiotic analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable when 
biological effects on ocean carbon concentration and alkalinity are ignored. 
The partial pressure of a gaseous constituent of air is the pressure which it 
alone would exert with unchanged temperature and number of moles per unit 
volume. The partial pressure of a dissolved gas in sea water is the partial 
pressure in air with which it would be in equilibrium. The partial pressure 
difference between sea water and air is positive when the partial pressure of 
the dissolved gas in sea water is greater than the partial pressure in air.'
(This one was previously 
surface_carbon_dioxide_partial_pressure_difference_between_sea_water_and_air_due_to_abiotic_component).

These four names are accepted and have been included in this week's standard 
name table update.

We have not so far discussed the proposed ph and alkalinity names, but I think 
the analogue syntax could equally well be applied to these as to the other 
natural/abiotic names. Paul, Jim and John, if you are happy with the following 
three names and definitions then they can be accepted and included in the April 
standard name table update.

sea_water_ph_natural_analogue_reported_on_total_scale,1
'sea_water_pH_reported_on_total_scale is the measure of acidity of sea water, 
defined as the negative logarithm of the activity of dissolved hydrogen ions 
plus bisulfate ions in a sea water medium; it can be measured or calculated; 
when measured the scale is defined according to a series of buffers prepared in 
artificial seawater containing bisulfate. The quantity may be written as 
pH(total) = -log([H+](free) + [HSO4-]). In ocean biogeochemistry models, a 
"natural analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable of 
imposing preindustrial atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, even when the 
model as a whole may be subjected to varying forcings.'
(Previously this one was 
sea_water_ph_reported_on_total_scale_due_to_natural_component).

sea_water_ph_abiotic_analogue_reported_on_total_scale, 1
'sea_water_pH_reported_on_total_scale is the measure of acidity of sea water, 
defined as the negative logarithm of the activity of dissolved hydrogen ions 
plus bisulfate ions in a sea water medium; it can be measured or calculated; 
when measured the scale is defined according to a series of buffers prepared in 
artificial seawater containing bisulfate. The quantity may be written as 
pH(total) = -log([H+](free) + [HSO4-]). In ocean biogeochemistry models, an 
"abiotic analogue" is used to simulate the effect on a modelled variable when 
biological effects on ocean carbon concentration and alkalinity are ignored.'
(Previously this one was 
sea_water_ph_reported_on_total_scale_due_to_abiotic_component).

sea_water_alkalinity_natural_analogue_expressed_as_mole_equivalent, mol m-3
'sea_water_alkalinity_expressed_as_mole_equivalent is the total alkalinity 
equivalent concentration (including carbonate, nitrogen, silicate, and borate 
components). In ocean biogeochemistry models, a "natural analogue" is used to 
simulate the effect on a modelled variable of imposing preindustrial 
atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations, even when the model as a whole may 
be subjected to varying forcings.'
(Previously this one was 
sea_water_alkalinity_expressed_as_mole_equivalent_due_to_natural_component).

OK?

There are eight further 'natural' and 'abiotic' names still under discussion. 
These are covered in sections 3 and 4 below because they are either carbon 
isotope names or proposed 'surface' names.

3. Carbon13 and carbon14 names.
There was some discussion on the 'expressed_as' part of the carbon13 and 
carbon14 names. Due to the formulation of the fluxes in the OMIP experiment it 
was suggested that the names should take the following form:
surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon13_dioxide_expressed_as_carbon13_due_to_abiotic_component
surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon14_dioxide_expressed_as_carbon_due_to_abiotic_component.

Based on both the isotope discussion and the abiotic/natural discussion in (2) 
above, I suggest now that these names and definitions should be:
surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon13_dioxide_abiotic_analogue_expressed_as_carbon13,
 kg m-2 s-1
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. 
"Downward" indicates a vector component which is positive when directed 
downward (negative upward). In accordance with common usage in geophysical 
disciplines, "flux" implies per unit area, called "flux density" in physics. In 
ocean biogeochemistry models, an "abiotic analogue" is used to simulate the 
effect on a modelled variable when biological effects on ocean carbon 
concentration and alkalinity are ignored. The phrase "expressed_as" is used in 
the construction A_expressed_as_B, where B is a chemical constituent of A. It 
means that the quantity indicated by the standard name is calculated solely 
with respect to the B contained in A, neglecting all other chemical 
constituents of A. Carbon13 is a stable isotope of carbon having six protons 
and seven neutrons.'

surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon14_dioxide_abiotic_analogue_expressed_as_carbon,
 kg m-2 s-1
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. 
"Downward" indicates a vector component which is positive when directed 
downward (negative upward). In accordance with common usage in geophysical 
disciplines, "flux" implies per unit area, called "flux density" in physics. In 
ocean biogeochemistry models, an "abiotic analogue" is used to simulate the 
effect on a modelled variable when biological effects on ocean carbon 
concentration and alkalinity are ignored. The phrase "expressed_as" is used in 
the construction A_expressed_as_B, where B is a chemical constituent of A. It 
means that the quantity indicated by the standard name is calculated solely 
with respect to the B contained in A, neglecting all other chemical 
constituents of A. Carbon14 is a radioactive isotope of carbon having six 
protons and eight neutrons, used in radiocarbon dating.'

If you are happy with these names they can be accepted and included in the 
April standard name table update.

4. When is a surface not a surface?

There are 3 proposed names for surface fluxes. Such names clearly refer to 
conditions at the air/sea interface and it is correct to label them as surface 
quantities. Those names are excluded from the discussion in this section.

There are 51 proposed names referring to 'surface_mole_concentration', 
'surface_mass_concentration', 'surface_sea_water_ph' and 
'surface_sea_water_alkalinity'. These are the names I want to discuss here. We 
have already had some discussion of these names on the mailing list and there 
has been some further on and off-list discussion over the last couple of days. 
So far we have not arrived at consensus, but it is important that we try to do 
so now to allow the majority of the remaining OMIP names to be accepted. I will 
attempt to summarize the discussion and then make a recommendation as to how I 
think we should proceed.

The reason for the discussion is that the surface concentration and alkalinity 
names have all been proposed with units of mol m-3 or kg m-3, which indicates 
that the named quantities are intended to represent 'near surface' layer 
concentrations, i.e., the top one or two levels in an ocean model. Although the 
ph names are dimensionless it is clear that these also are intended to 
represent a near surface layer. In CF standard names it is inappropriate to 
refer to these layer quantities simply as 'surface' quantities because the term 
'surface' is defined as 'the lower boundary of the atmosphere', i.e. it is the 
exact interface between air and sea which therefore has no thickness or volume 
and is therefore unsuitable for use with units of m-3.

At an earlier point in the discussion 
(http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/pipermail/cf-metadata/2016/059044.html) I 
mentioned that we have a small number of existing sea_surface names - these are 
near surface layer quantities and nearly all relate to specific definitions of 
sea surface temperature, e.g., sea_surface_skin_temperature is defined as 'the 
temperature within the conductive diffusion-dominated sub-layer at a depth of 
approximately 10 - 20 micrometers below the air-sea interface'. The only 
generic quantity is sea_surface_temperature which is a deliberately vague term 
to cover different definitions of SST that have been used historically, for 
example, when making temperature measurements using the water in a ship's 
engine intake or by lowering a bucket over the side. These are all in some 
sense 'near surface' values but the depth of measurement can vary widely and in 
some cases may not even be recorded. I did toy with the idea that for OMIP we 
could have 'sea_surface' names for nea
 r-surface quantities because this would at least be consistent with the m-3 in 
the units. However, I don't think this is the most satisfactory approach 
because the OMIP quantities can perfectly well be described by using standard 
names that can apply to quantities at any depth in conjunction with coordinate 
variables and coordinate bounds to state the actual depth and thickness of the 
surface layer. Even if we did introduce sea_surface names for OMIP it would 
still be necessary to supply the coordinate information in other metadata 
attributes to fully describe the location of the data, so it wouldn't do 
anything to reduce the amount of metadata that would need to be provided. Not 
to supply this metadata would render the data far less useful. Furthermore, 
other contributors to the discussion (Roy, Jonathan) have clearly expressed the 
view that we should not generalise the rather specialised 
sea_surface_temperature approach to other variables.

In his most recent post, Jim has said that many fields will be output as 2D 
quantities in order to reduce the amount of data generated for OMIP. Karl has 
already explained that from a CMIP6 viewpoint this is perfectly consistent with 
using standard names that could equally well apply to 3D quantities. It is also 
consistent with usual practice in CF. There is no limitation on the number of 
data variables in a CF-NetCDF file that can have the same standard name and 
they do not all have to have the same dimensions, so it's even possible to have 
2D and 3D fields with the same standard name in the same file. The important 
point for data users is not to rely solely on the standard name to decide how 
to treat a variable, but also to examine many other metadata attributes such as 
coordinate variables, coordinate bounds and cell_methods. This is the always 
the correct way to work with CF metadata. Indeed, I would argue that the most 
'standard' way to record the OMIP near-surface data in your 
 files is to follow the practice I described earlier: use standard names that 
can apply to any depth and supply coordinate variables and coordinate bounds to 
state the actual depth and thickness of the surface layer. I think users of the 
data are more likely to discover data named in this way than if we introduce 
special sea_surface names for some quantities. Also, this approach 
significantly reduces the number of new standard names needed for OMIP. For 
example, the proposed name 
[sea_]surface_mole_concentration_of_carbonate_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water 
could be dropped in favour of using the existing name 
mole_concentration_of_carbonate_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water. Again, it is 
standard practice in the CF community to avoid adding new standard names that 
are not strictly necessary.

Based on the above arguments I recommend that we follow the second approach and 
don't introduce separate sea_surface names. Please can those of you who have 
been engaged in this discussion indicate whether you are in agreement. If we 
can get consensus, or at least a clear majority on which approach to use, then 
many of the outstanding names can be accepted very quickly. If we are unable to 
reach a decision through this discussion, then I will need to call on the CF 
committee to vote on their preferred approach. The committee's decision will be 
final. This is in accordance with usual CF procedures.
 
5. Miscellaneous questions
Apart from the discussions outlined in the preceding sections, there are a few 
names about which I have specific questions.

a. surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon_dioxide (kg m-2 s-1)

We have an existing standard name, 
surface_downward_mass_flux_of_carbon_dioxide_expressed_as_carbon (kg m-2 s-1) 
defined as
' "Downward" indicates a vector component which is positive when directed 
downward (negative upward). The phrase 'expressed_as' is used in the 
construction A_expressed_as_B, where B is a chemical constituent of A. It means 
that the quantity indicated by the standard name is calculated solely with 
respect to the B contained in A, neglecting all other chemical constituents of 
A. In accordance with common usage in geophysical disciplines, "flux" implies 
per unit area, called "flux density" in physics. The surface called "surface" 
means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. The chemical formula for carbon 
dioxide is CO2.'

I think this existing name may be the one you need. Do you agree?

b. 
surface_mole_concentration_of_organic_detritus_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water 
(mol m-3)
and
surface_mole_concentration_of_particulate_organic_matter_expressed_as_nitrogen_in_sea_water
 (mol m-3)

We have existing 3D names for these, i.e., without the 'surface_' at the 
beginning, so depending on the outcome of the discussion in section 4 we may 
not actually need to introduce new names for these quantities. However, a 
separate question relates to the definitions. Currently in standard names we 
define organic detritus as 'particles of debris from decaying plants and 
animals'. We don't have a definition for 'particulate_organic_matter' in sea 
water. I'd like to understand the difference between 'organic_detritus' and 
'particulate_organic_matter'. In the latter case, does it mean 'organic' in the 
sense of organic chemistry, rather than biological life forms? That would 
certainly be consistent with the way the term is used in atmosphere names.

c. tendency_of_ocean_mole_content_of_nitrogen_due_to_biological_production
What is meant here by 'nitrogen'? Does it mean atomic nitrogen, molecular 
nitrogen, all chemical species containing nitrogen atoms, or something else?

d. 
tendency_of_mole_concentration_of_particulate_organic_matter_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water_due_to_remineralization
Please can you supply a (brief) explanation of the term 'remineralization' that 
we can include in the definitions.

e. 
mole_concentration_of_carbonate_expressed_as_carbon_for_sea_water_in_equilibrium_with_pure_calcite
 (mol m-3)
and
mole_concentration_of_carbonate_expressed_as_carbon_for_sea_water_in_equilibrium_with_pure_aragonite
 (mol m-3)

Are we talking here about an equilibrium between dissolution and precipitation 
of calcite and aragonite, i.e., mole concentrations in chemically saturated 
solutions? If so, then we have existing names for these:
mole_concentration_of_aragonite_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water_at_saturation 
(mol m-3)
' 'Mole concentration' means number of moles per unit volume, also 
called"molarity", and is used in the construction mole_concentration_of_X_in_Y, 
whereX is a material constituent of Y. A chemical or biological species denoted 
by X may be described by a single term such as 'nitrogen' or a phrase such as 
'nox_expressed_as_nitrogen'. Mole concentration at saturation means the mole 
concentration in a saturated solution. The phrase 'expressed_as' is used in the 
construction A_expressed_as_B, where B is a chemical constituent of A. It means 
that the quantity indicated by the standard name is calculated solely with 
respect to the B contained in A, neglecting all other chemical constituents of 
A. Aragonite is a mineral that is a polymorph of calcium carbonate. The 
chemical formula of aragonite is CaCO3. Standard names also exist for calcite, 
another polymorph of calcium carbonate.'

mole_concentration_of_calcite_expressed_as_carbon_in_sea_water_at_saturation 
(mol m-3)
' 'Mole concentration' means number of moles per unit volume, also 
called"molarity", and is used in the construction mole_concentration_of_X_in_Y, 
whereX is a material constituent of Y. A chemical or biological species denoted 
by X may be described by a single term such as 'nitrogen' or a phrase such as 
'nox_expressed_as_nitrogen'. Mole concentration at saturation means the mole 
concentration in a saturated solution.The phrase 'expressed_as' is used in the 
construction A_expressed_as_B, where B is a chemical constituent of A. It means 
that the quantity indicated by the standard name is calculated solely with 
respect to the B contained in A, neglecting all other chemical constituents of 
A. Calcite is a mineral that is a polymorph of calcium carbonate. The chemical 
formula of calcite is CaCO3. Standard names also exist for aragonite, another 
polymorph of calcium carbonate.'

Do these look like the ones you need?

Best wishes,
Alison

------
Alison Pamment                                                       Tel: +44 
1235 778065
Centre for Environmental Data Analysis         Email: [email protected]
STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory     
R25, 2.22
Harwell Campus, Didcot, OX11 0QX, U.K.

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