Anne Hoffmann, Lukas Osterloh, Robert Stone, Astrid Lampert, Christoph Ritter, Maria Stock, Peter Tunved, Tabea Hennig, Christine Böckmann, Shao-Meng Li, Kostas Eleftheriadis, Marion Maturilli, Thomas Orgis, Andreas Herber, Roland Neuber, Klaus Dethloff
- In this work, a closure experiment for tropospheric aerosol is presented. Aerosol size distributions and single scattering albedo from remote sensing data are compared to those measured in-situ. An aerosol pollution event on 4 April 2009 was observed by ground based and airborne lidar and photometer in and around Ny-Alesund, Spitsbergen, as well as by DMPS, nephelometer and particle soot absorption photometer at the nearby Zeppelin Mountain Research Station.
The presented measurements were conducted in an area of 40 x 20 km around Ny-Alesund as part of the 2009 Polar Airborne Measurements and Arctic Regional Climate Model Simulation Project (PAMARCMiP). Aerosol mainly in the accumulation mode was found in the lower troposphere, however, enhanced backscattering was observed up to the tropopause altitude. A comparison of meteorological data available at different locations reveals a stable multi-layer-structure of the lower troposphere. It is followed by the retrieval of optical and microphysical aerosol parameters. Extinction valuesIn this work, a closure experiment for tropospheric aerosol is presented. Aerosol size distributions and single scattering albedo from remote sensing data are compared to those measured in-situ. An aerosol pollution event on 4 April 2009 was observed by ground based and airborne lidar and photometer in and around Ny-Alesund, Spitsbergen, as well as by DMPS, nephelometer and particle soot absorption photometer at the nearby Zeppelin Mountain Research Station.
The presented measurements were conducted in an area of 40 x 20 km around Ny-Alesund as part of the 2009 Polar Airborne Measurements and Arctic Regional Climate Model Simulation Project (PAMARCMiP). Aerosol mainly in the accumulation mode was found in the lower troposphere, however, enhanced backscattering was observed up to the tropopause altitude. A comparison of meteorological data available at different locations reveals a stable multi-layer-structure of the lower troposphere. It is followed by the retrieval of optical and microphysical aerosol parameters. Extinction values have been derived using two different methods, and it was found that extinction (especially in the UV) derived from Raman lidar data significantly surpasses the extinction derived from photometer AOD profiles. Airborne lidar data shows volume depolarization values to be less than 2.5% between 500 m and 2.5 km altitude, hence, particles in this range can be assumed to be of spherical shape. In-situ particle number concentrations measured at the Zeppelin Mountain Research Station at 474 m altitude peak at about 0.18 mu m diameter, which was also found for the microphysical inversion calculations performed at 850 m and 1500 m altitude. Number concentrations depend on the assumed extinction values, and slightly decrease with altitude as well as the effective particle diameter. A low imaginary part in the derived refractive index suggests weakly absorbing aerosols, which is confirmed by low black carbon concentrations, measured at the Zeppelin Mountain as well as on board the Polar 5 aircraft.…
MetadatenAuthor details: | Anne Hoffmann, Lukas Osterloh, Robert Stone, Astrid Lampert, Christoph RitterORCiDGND, Maria Stock, Peter Tunved, Tabea Hennig, Christine BöckmannORCiDGND, Shao-Meng Li, Kostas Eleftheriadis, Marion MaturilliORCiD, Thomas Orgis, Andreas Herber, Roland Neuber, Klaus DethloffORCiDGND |
---|
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2011.11.027 |
---|
ISSN: | 1352-2310 |
---|
Title of parent work (English): | Atmospheric environment : air pollution ; emissions, transport and dispersion, transformation, deposition effects, micrometeorology, urban atmosphere, global atmosphere |
---|
Publisher: | Elsevier |
---|
Place of publishing: | Oxford |
---|
Publication type: | Article |
---|
Language: | English |
---|
Year of first publication: | 2012 |
---|
Publication year: | 2012 |
---|
Release date: | 2017/03/26 |
---|
Tag: | Aerosols; Arctic; Arctic haze; Lidar |
---|
Volume: | 52 |
---|
Issue: | 3 |
---|
Number of pages: | 11 |
---|
First page: | 56 |
---|
Last Page: | 66 |
---|
Organizational units: | Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät / Institut für Mathematik |
---|
Peer review: | Referiert |
---|