Trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the North American Arctic.

Atmospheric aerosols are one of the greatest sources of uncertainty in current global climate models. Aerosols affect the earth’s radiative budget by scattering or absorbing incoming solar radiation and by acting as cloud condensation nuclei. Carbonaceous aerosols are dominated by two main component...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barrett, Tate E., 1986-
Other Authors: Sheesley, Rebecca Jacobs.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2104/9855
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spelling ftbayloruniv:oai:null:2104/9855 2023-10-01T03:49:54+02:00 Trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the North American Arctic. Barrett, Tate E., 1986- Sheesley, Rebecca Jacobs. 2016-09-01T15:12:57Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2104/9855 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/2104/9855 Worldwide access. Access changed 10/26/18. Elemental carbon. Organic carbon. Aerosols. Radiocarbon. Aerosol optical properties Thesis text 2016 ftbayloruniv 2023-09-05T05:27:25Z Atmospheric aerosols are one of the greatest sources of uncertainty in current global climate models. Aerosols affect the earth’s radiative budget by scattering or absorbing incoming solar radiation and by acting as cloud condensation nuclei. Carbonaceous aerosols are dominated by two main components: organic carbon and elemental carbon. Traditionally, only elemental carbon aerosols acted as absorbing species in global climate models, causing models to underestimate warming in certain regions, particularly the Arctic. However, it is now known that a fraction of organic carbon, or brown carbon, absorbs incoming solar radiation mainly in the ultra-violet wavelengths, and is responsible for as much as 19% of total aerosol absorption resulting from anthropogenic activity globally. Primary aerosols are emitted directly into the atmosphere via natural and anthropogenic processes wildfires, fossil fuel combustion, and biomass burning, while secondary organic aerosols are formed in the atmosphere via gaseous emission partitioning into the condensed phase. Due to their short atmospheric lifespan, 1-2 weeks, it is thought that decreasing the emissions of elemental and brown carbon would immediately reduce climate forcing across the globe. The Arctic is particularly sensitive to anthropogenic climate forcing. It is warming at a rate nearly twice the global mean, with temperature increases of nearly 2 °C since 1970. Aerosols play a vital role in the radiative budget of the Arctic due to their direct and indirect effects. For example, deposition of atmospheric aerosols on snow and ice reduces surface albedo, contributing to changing melt patterns. In order to determine the contributions of fossil and contemporary sources to organic and elemental carbon in the North American Arctic, a combination of source apportionment strategies, including radiocarbon abundance, was applied to samples collected at Barrow, Alaska. Optical properties were also explored to determine the overall efficiency of light-absorbing particles in the ... Thesis albedo Arctic Barrow Alaska Baylor University: BEARdocs Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Baylor University: BEARdocs
op_collection_id ftbayloruniv
language English
topic Elemental carbon. Organic carbon. Aerosols. Radiocarbon. Aerosol optical properties
spellingShingle Elemental carbon. Organic carbon. Aerosols. Radiocarbon. Aerosol optical properties
Barrett, Tate E., 1986-
Trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the North American Arctic.
topic_facet Elemental carbon. Organic carbon. Aerosols. Radiocarbon. Aerosol optical properties
description Atmospheric aerosols are one of the greatest sources of uncertainty in current global climate models. Aerosols affect the earth’s radiative budget by scattering or absorbing incoming solar radiation and by acting as cloud condensation nuclei. Carbonaceous aerosols are dominated by two main components: organic carbon and elemental carbon. Traditionally, only elemental carbon aerosols acted as absorbing species in global climate models, causing models to underestimate warming in certain regions, particularly the Arctic. However, it is now known that a fraction of organic carbon, or brown carbon, absorbs incoming solar radiation mainly in the ultra-violet wavelengths, and is responsible for as much as 19% of total aerosol absorption resulting from anthropogenic activity globally. Primary aerosols are emitted directly into the atmosphere via natural and anthropogenic processes wildfires, fossil fuel combustion, and biomass burning, while secondary organic aerosols are formed in the atmosphere via gaseous emission partitioning into the condensed phase. Due to their short atmospheric lifespan, 1-2 weeks, it is thought that decreasing the emissions of elemental and brown carbon would immediately reduce climate forcing across the globe. The Arctic is particularly sensitive to anthropogenic climate forcing. It is warming at a rate nearly twice the global mean, with temperature increases of nearly 2 °C since 1970. Aerosols play a vital role in the radiative budget of the Arctic due to their direct and indirect effects. For example, deposition of atmospheric aerosols on snow and ice reduces surface albedo, contributing to changing melt patterns. In order to determine the contributions of fossil and contemporary sources to organic and elemental carbon in the North American Arctic, a combination of source apportionment strategies, including radiocarbon abundance, was applied to samples collected at Barrow, Alaska. Optical properties were also explored to determine the overall efficiency of light-absorbing particles in the ...
author2 Sheesley, Rebecca Jacobs.
format Thesis
author Barrett, Tate E., 1986-
author_facet Barrett, Tate E., 1986-
author_sort Barrett, Tate E., 1986-
title Trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the North American Arctic.
title_short Trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the North American Arctic.
title_full Trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the North American Arctic.
title_fullStr Trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the North American Arctic.
title_full_unstemmed Trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the North American Arctic.
title_sort trends, optical properties, and source contributions to elemental and organic carbon influencing the north american arctic.
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2104/9855
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre albedo
Arctic
Barrow
Alaska
genre_facet albedo
Arctic
Barrow
Alaska
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2104/9855
op_rights Worldwide access.
Access changed 10/26/18.
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