Seasonality of aerosol optical properties in the Arctic
Given the sensitivity of the Arctic climate to short-lived climate forcers, long-term in situ surface measurements of aerosol parameters are useful in gaining insight into the magnitude and variability of these climate forcings. Seasonality of aerosol optical properties – including the aerosol light...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Atmospheric chemistry and physics 2018-08, Vol.18 (16), p.11599-11622 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Given the sensitivity of the Arctic climate to short-lived climate forcers,
long-term in situ surface measurements of aerosol parameters are useful in
gaining insight into the magnitude and variability of these climate forcings.
Seasonality of aerosol optical properties – including the aerosol
light-scattering coefficient, absorption coefficient, single-scattering
albedo, scattering Ångström exponent, and asymmetry parameter – are
presented for six monitoring sites throughout the Arctic: Alert, Canada;
Barrow, USA; Pallas, Finland; Summit, Greenland; Tiksi, Russia; and Zeppelin
Mountain, Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard, Norway. Results show annual variability
in all parameters, though the seasonality of each aerosol optical property
varies from site to site. There is a large diversity in magnitude and
variability of scattering coefficient at all sites, reflecting differences in
aerosol source, transport, and removal at different locations throughout the
Arctic. Of the Arctic sites, the highest annual mean scattering coefficient
is measured at Tiksi (12.47 Mm−1), and the lowest annual mean
scattering coefficient is measured at Summit (1.74 Mm−1). At most
sites, aerosol absorption peaks in the winter and spring, and has a minimum
throughout the Arctic in the summer, indicative of the Arctic haze
phenomenon; however, nuanced variations in seasonalities suggest that this
phenomenon is not identically observed in all regions of the Arctic. The
highest annual mean absorption coefficient is measured at Pallas
(0.48 Mm−1), and Summit has the lowest annual mean absorption
coefficient (0.12 Mm−1). At the Arctic monitoring stations analyzed
here, mean annual single-scattering albedo ranges from 0.909 (at Pallas) to
0.960 (at Barrow), the mean annual scattering Ångström exponent
ranges from 1.04 (at Barrow) to 1.80 (at Summit), and the mean asymmetry
parameter ranges from 0.57 (at Alert) to 0.75 (at Summit). Systematic
variability of aerosol optical properties in the Arctic supports the notion
that the sites presented here measure a variety of aerosol populations, which
also experience different removal mechanisms. A robust conclusion from the
seasonal cycles presented is that the Arctic cannot be treated as one common
and uniform environment but rather is a region with ample spatiotemporal
variability in aerosols. This notion is important in considering the design
or aerosol monitoring networks in the region and is important for informing
climate models to better represent shor |
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ISSN: | 1680-7324 1680-7316 1680-7324 |
DOI: | 10.5194/acp-18-11599-2018 |