A Case Study on Drivers of the Isotopic Composition of Water Vapour at the Coast of East Antarctica

Stable water isotopes (SWIs) contain valuable information on the past climate and phase changes in the hydrologic cycle. Recently, vapour measurements in the polar regions have provided new insights into the effects of snow-related and atmospheric processes on SWIs. The purpose of this study is to e...

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Main Authors: Chaar, Riqo, Sigmund, Armin, Ebner, Pirmin Philipp, Lehning, Michael
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: Authorea, Inc. 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167340708.83192511/v1
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spelling crwinnower:10.22541/essoar.167340708.83192511/v1 2024-06-02T07:58:26+00:00 A Case Study on Drivers of the Isotopic Composition of Water Vapour at the Coast of East Antarctica Chaar, Riqo Sigmund, Armin Ebner, Pirmin Philipp Lehning, Michael 2023 http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167340708.83192511/v1 unknown Authorea, Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ posted-content 2023 crwinnower https://doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167340708.83192511/v1 2024-05-07T14:19:30Z Stable water isotopes (SWIs) contain valuable information on the past climate and phase changes in the hydrologic cycle. Recently, vapour measurements in the polar regions have provided new insights into the effects of snow-related and atmospheric processes on SWIs. The purpose of this study is to elucidate the drivers of the particularly depleted vapour isotopic composition measured on a ship close to the East Antarctic coast during the Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition in 2017. Reanalysis data and backward trajectories are used to model the isotopic composition of air parcels arriving in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) above the ship. A novel approach is developed to account for moisture exchanges with the snow surface. The model generally reproduces the observed trend with strongly depleted vapour δ18O values in the middle of the 6-day study period. This depletion is caused by direct air mass advection from the ice sheet where the vapour is more depleted in heavy SWIs due to distillation during cloud formation. The time spent by the air masses in the marine ABL shortly before arrival at the ship is crucial as ocean evaporation typically leads to an abrupt change in the isotopic signature. Snow sublimation is another important driver because the air masses and the sublimation flux will differ substantially in their isotopic composition if the air masses cross the ocean-snow boundary or descend from higher atmospheric levels. Although our model makes strong simplifications, it is a useful and computationally efficient method for understanding SWI dynamics at polar sites. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica East Antarctica Ice Sheet The Winnower Antarctic East Antarctica The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection The Winnower
op_collection_id crwinnower
language unknown
description Stable water isotopes (SWIs) contain valuable information on the past climate and phase changes in the hydrologic cycle. Recently, vapour measurements in the polar regions have provided new insights into the effects of snow-related and atmospheric processes on SWIs. The purpose of this study is to elucidate the drivers of the particularly depleted vapour isotopic composition measured on a ship close to the East Antarctic coast during the Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition in 2017. Reanalysis data and backward trajectories are used to model the isotopic composition of air parcels arriving in the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) above the ship. A novel approach is developed to account for moisture exchanges with the snow surface. The model generally reproduces the observed trend with strongly depleted vapour δ18O values in the middle of the 6-day study period. This depletion is caused by direct air mass advection from the ice sheet where the vapour is more depleted in heavy SWIs due to distillation during cloud formation. The time spent by the air masses in the marine ABL shortly before arrival at the ship is crucial as ocean evaporation typically leads to an abrupt change in the isotopic signature. Snow sublimation is another important driver because the air masses and the sublimation flux will differ substantially in their isotopic composition if the air masses cross the ocean-snow boundary or descend from higher atmospheric levels. Although our model makes strong simplifications, it is a useful and computationally efficient method for understanding SWI dynamics at polar sites.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Chaar, Riqo
Sigmund, Armin
Ebner, Pirmin Philipp
Lehning, Michael
spellingShingle Chaar, Riqo
Sigmund, Armin
Ebner, Pirmin Philipp
Lehning, Michael
A Case Study on Drivers of the Isotopic Composition of Water Vapour at the Coast of East Antarctica
author_facet Chaar, Riqo
Sigmund, Armin
Ebner, Pirmin Philipp
Lehning, Michael
author_sort Chaar, Riqo
title A Case Study on Drivers of the Isotopic Composition of Water Vapour at the Coast of East Antarctica
title_short A Case Study on Drivers of the Isotopic Composition of Water Vapour at the Coast of East Antarctica
title_full A Case Study on Drivers of the Isotopic Composition of Water Vapour at the Coast of East Antarctica
title_fullStr A Case Study on Drivers of the Isotopic Composition of Water Vapour at the Coast of East Antarctica
title_full_unstemmed A Case Study on Drivers of the Isotopic Composition of Water Vapour at the Coast of East Antarctica
title_sort case study on drivers of the isotopic composition of water vapour at the coast of east antarctica
publisher Authorea, Inc.
publishDate 2023
url http://dx.doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167340708.83192511/v1
geographic Antarctic
East Antarctica
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
East Antarctica
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Ice Sheet
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
East Antarctica
Ice Sheet
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.22541/essoar.167340708.83192511/v1
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