Airborne in situ measurements of aerosol size distributions and black carbon across the Indo-Gangetic Plain during SWAAMI–RAWEX
During the combined South-West Asian Aerosol–Monsoon Interactions and Regional Aerosol Warming Experiment (SWAAMI–RAWEX), collocated airborne measurements of aerosol number–size distributions in the size (diameter) regime 0.5 to 20 µm and black carbon (BC) mass concentrations were made across the In...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Atmospheric chemistry and physics 2020-07, Vol.20 (14), p.8593-8610 |
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Zusammenfassung: | During the combined South-West Asian Aerosol–Monsoon Interactions and Regional
Aerosol Warming Experiment (SWAAMI–RAWEX), collocated airborne
measurements of aerosol number–size distributions in the size (diameter)
regime 0.5 to 20 µm and black carbon (BC) mass concentrations were
made across the Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP), for the first time, from three
distinct locations, just prior to the onset of the Indian summer monsoon. These
measurements provided an east–west transect of region-specific properties of
aerosols as the environment transformed from mostly arid conditions of the
western IGP (represented by Jodhpur, JDR) having dominance of natural
aerosols to the central IGP (represented by Varanasi, VNS) having very high
anthropogenic emissions, to the eastern IGP (represented by the coastal
station Bhubaneswar, BBR) characterized by a mixture of the IGP outflow and
marine aerosols. Despite these, the aerosol size distribution revealed an
increase in coarse mode concentration and coarse mode mass fraction
(fractional contribution to the total aerosol mass) with the increase in
altitude across the entire IGP, especially above the well-mixed region.
Consequently, both the mode radii and geometric mean radii of the size
distributions showed an increase with altitude. However, near the surface
and within the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL), the features were specific
to the different subregions, with the highest coarse mode mass fraction
(FMC∼72 %) in the western IGP and highest
accumulation fraction in the central IGP with the eastern IGP
in between. The elevated coarse mode fraction is attributed to mineral dust
load arising from local production as well as due to advection from the
west. This was further corroborated by data from the Cloud-Aerosol
Transport System (CATS) on board the International Space Station (ISS),
which also revealed that the vertical extent of dust aerosols reached as
high as 5 km during this period. Mass concentrations of BC were moderate
(∼1 µg m−3) with very little altitude variation
up to 3.5 km, except over VNS where very high concentrations were seen near
the surface and within the ABL. The BC-induced atmospheric heating rate was
highest near the surface at VNS (∼0.81 K d−1), while
showing an increasing pattern with altitude at BBR (∼0.35 K d−1 at the ceiling altitude). |
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ISSN: | 1680-7324 1680-7316 1680-7324 |
DOI: | 10.5194/acp-20-8593-2020 |