Accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic during the ARCTAS aircraft campaign: Long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the Asian continent

We evaluate the impact of transport from midlatitudes on aerosol number concentrations in the accumulation mode (light-scattering particles (LSP) with diameters >180 nm) in the Arctic during the Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites (ARCTAS) campaign....

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Main Authors: Matsui, H, Kondo, Y, Moteki, N, Takegawa, N, Sahu, LK, Koike, M, Zhao, Y, Fuelberg, HE, Sessions, WR, Diskin, G, Anderson, BE, Blake, DR, Wisthaler, A, Cubison, MJ, Jimenez, JL
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2011
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Online Access:https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5216p0pn
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spelling ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org:ark:/13030/qt5216p0pn 2023-10-25T01:34:22+02:00 Accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic during the ARCTAS aircraft campaign: Long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the Asian continent Matsui, H Kondo, Y Moteki, N Takegawa, N Sahu, LK Koike, M Zhao, Y Fuelberg, HE Sessions, WR Diskin, G Anderson, BE Blake, DR Wisthaler, A Cubison, MJ Jimenez, JL 2011-01-01 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5216p0pn unknown eScholarship, University of California qt5216p0pn https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5216p0pn CC-BY Journal of Geophysical Research, vol 116, iss D20 Earth Sciences Atmospheric Sciences Environmental Sciences Pollution and Contamination Climate Action Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences article 2011 ftcdlib 2023-09-25T18:03:35Z We evaluate the impact of transport from midlatitudes on aerosol number concentrations in the accumulation mode (light-scattering particles (LSP) with diameters >180 nm) in the Arctic during the Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites (ARCTAS) campaign. We focus on transport from the Asian continent. We find marked contrasts in the number concentration (NLSP), transport efficiency (TE N-LSP, the fraction transported from sources to the Arctic), size distribution, and the chemical composition of aerosols between air parcels from anthropogenic sources in East Asia (Asian AN) and biomass burning sources in Russia and Kazakhstan (Russian BB). Asian AN air had lower NLSP and TEN-LSP (25 cm-3 and 18% in spring and 6.2 cm-3 and 3.0% in summer) than Russian BB air (280 cm-3 and 97% in spring and 36 cm-3 and 7.6% in summer) due to more efficient wet scavenging during transport from East Asia. Russian BB in this spring is the most important source of accumulation-mode aerosols over the Arctic, and BB emissions are found to be the primary source of aerosols within all the data in spring during ARCTAS. On the other hand, the contribution of Asian AN transport had a negligible effect on the accumulation-mode aerosol number concentration in the Arctic during ARCTAS. Compared with background air, NLSP was 2.3-4.7 times greater for Russian BB air but 2.4-2.6 times less for Asian AN air in both spring and summer. This result shows that the transport of Asian AN air decreases aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic, despite the large emissions of aerosols in East Asia. The very low aerosol number concentrations in Asian AN air were caused by wet removal during vertical transport in association with warm conveyor belts (WCBs). Therefore, this cleansing effect will be prominent for air transported via WCBs from other midlatitude regions and seasons. The inflow of clean midlatitude air can potentially have an important impact on accumulation-mode aerosol number concentrations in the ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic University of California: eScholarship Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language unknown
topic Earth Sciences
Atmospheric Sciences
Environmental Sciences
Pollution and Contamination
Climate Action
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
spellingShingle Earth Sciences
Atmospheric Sciences
Environmental Sciences
Pollution and Contamination
Climate Action
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
Matsui, H
Kondo, Y
Moteki, N
Takegawa, N
Sahu, LK
Koike, M
Zhao, Y
Fuelberg, HE
Sessions, WR
Diskin, G
Anderson, BE
Blake, DR
Wisthaler, A
Cubison, MJ
Jimenez, JL
Accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic during the ARCTAS aircraft campaign: Long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the Asian continent
topic_facet Earth Sciences
Atmospheric Sciences
Environmental Sciences
Pollution and Contamination
Climate Action
Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
description We evaluate the impact of transport from midlatitudes on aerosol number concentrations in the accumulation mode (light-scattering particles (LSP) with diameters >180 nm) in the Arctic during the Arctic Research of the Composition of the Troposphere from Aircraft and Satellites (ARCTAS) campaign. We focus on transport from the Asian continent. We find marked contrasts in the number concentration (NLSP), transport efficiency (TE N-LSP, the fraction transported from sources to the Arctic), size distribution, and the chemical composition of aerosols between air parcels from anthropogenic sources in East Asia (Asian AN) and biomass burning sources in Russia and Kazakhstan (Russian BB). Asian AN air had lower NLSP and TEN-LSP (25 cm-3 and 18% in spring and 6.2 cm-3 and 3.0% in summer) than Russian BB air (280 cm-3 and 97% in spring and 36 cm-3 and 7.6% in summer) due to more efficient wet scavenging during transport from East Asia. Russian BB in this spring is the most important source of accumulation-mode aerosols over the Arctic, and BB emissions are found to be the primary source of aerosols within all the data in spring during ARCTAS. On the other hand, the contribution of Asian AN transport had a negligible effect on the accumulation-mode aerosol number concentration in the Arctic during ARCTAS. Compared with background air, NLSP was 2.3-4.7 times greater for Russian BB air but 2.4-2.6 times less for Asian AN air in both spring and summer. This result shows that the transport of Asian AN air decreases aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic, despite the large emissions of aerosols in East Asia. The very low aerosol number concentrations in Asian AN air were caused by wet removal during vertical transport in association with warm conveyor belts (WCBs). Therefore, this cleansing effect will be prominent for air transported via WCBs from other midlatitude regions and seasons. The inflow of clean midlatitude air can potentially have an important impact on accumulation-mode aerosol number concentrations in the ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Matsui, H
Kondo, Y
Moteki, N
Takegawa, N
Sahu, LK
Koike, M
Zhao, Y
Fuelberg, HE
Sessions, WR
Diskin, G
Anderson, BE
Blake, DR
Wisthaler, A
Cubison, MJ
Jimenez, JL
author_facet Matsui, H
Kondo, Y
Moteki, N
Takegawa, N
Sahu, LK
Koike, M
Zhao, Y
Fuelberg, HE
Sessions, WR
Diskin, G
Anderson, BE
Blake, DR
Wisthaler, A
Cubison, MJ
Jimenez, JL
author_sort Matsui, H
title Accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic during the ARCTAS aircraft campaign: Long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the Asian continent
title_short Accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic during the ARCTAS aircraft campaign: Long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the Asian continent
title_full Accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic during the ARCTAS aircraft campaign: Long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the Asian continent
title_fullStr Accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic during the ARCTAS aircraft campaign: Long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the Asian continent
title_full_unstemmed Accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the Arctic during the ARCTAS aircraft campaign: Long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the Asian continent
title_sort accumulation‐mode aerosol number concentrations in the arctic during the arctas aircraft campaign: long‐range transport of polluted and clean air from the asian continent
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2011
url https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5216p0pn
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Journal of Geophysical Research, vol 116, iss D20
op_relation qt5216p0pn
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5216p0pn
op_rights CC-BY
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