The concentration of a given species in a pristine air mass in which anthropogenic
impurities of a relatively short
lifetime are not present. The background concentrations of relatively long-lived molecules,
methane, carbon dioxide, halocarbons
(
CF3Cl,
CF2Cl2,
etc.) and some other species continue to rise due to anthropogenic input, so the composition
of background air is undergoing continual change. Background concentration of a given
species is sometimes considered to be the concentration of that impurity in a given
air mass when the contribution from anthropogenic sources under study is absent. Synonymous
with baseline concentration.
Source:
PAC, 1990, 62, 2167
(Glossary of atmospheric chemistry terms (Recommendations 1990))
on page 2175