Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign

Establishing the relationship between marine boundary layer (MBL) aerosols and surface water biogeochemistry is required to understand aerosol and cloud production processes over the remote ocean and represent them more accurately in earth system models and global climate projections. This was addre...

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Published in:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Main Authors: Law, CS, Smith, MJ, Harvey, MJ, Bell, TG, Cravigan, LT, Elliott, FC, Lawson, SJ, Lizotte, M, Marriner, A, McGregor, J, Ristovski, Z, Safi, KA, Saltzman, ES, Vaattovaara, P, Walker, CF
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9rv0k3gc
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description Establishing the relationship between marine boundary layer (MBL) aerosols and surface water biogeochemistry is required to understand aerosol and cloud production processes over the remote ocean and represent them more accurately in earth system models and global climate projections. This was addressed by the SOAP (Surface Ocean Aerosol Production) campaign, which examined air.sea interaction over biologically productive frontal waters east of New Zealand. This overview details the objectives, regional context, sampling strategy and provisional findings of a pilot study, PreSOAP, in austral summer 2011 and the following SOAP voyage in late austral summer 2012. Both voyages characterized surface water and MBL composition in three phytoplankton blooms of differing species composition and biogeochemistry, with significant regional correlation observed between chlorophyll a and DMSsw. Surface seawater dimethylsulfide (DMSsw) and associated air.sea DMS flux showed spatial variation during the SOAP voyage, with maxima of 25 nmol L-1and 100 molm-2d-1, respectively, recorded in a dinoflagellate bloom. Inclusion of SOAP data in a regional DMSsw compilation indicates that the current climatological mean is an underestimate for this region of the southwest Pacific. Estimation of the DMS gas transfer velocity (kDMS/by independent techniques of eddy covariance and gradient flux showed good agreement, although both exhibited periodic deviations from model estimates. Flux anomalies were related to surface warming and sea surface microlayer enrichment and also reflected the heterogeneous distribution of DMSsw and the associated flux footprint. Other aerosol precursors measured included the halides and various volatile organic carbon compounds, with first measurements of the short-lived gases glyoxal and methylglyoxal in pristine Southern Ocean marine air indicating an unidentified local source. The application of a real-time clean sector, contaminant markers and a common aerosol inlet facilitated multi-sensor measurement of uncontaminated air. Aerosol characterization identified variable Aitken mode and consistent submicron-sized accumulation and coarse modes. Submicron aerosol mass was dominated by secondary particles containing ammonium sulfate/bisulfate under light winds, with an increase in sea salt under higher wind speeds. MBL measurements and chamber experiments identified a significant organic component in primary and secondary aerosols. Comparison of SOAP aerosol number and size distributions reveals an underprediction in GLOMAP (GLObal Model of Aerosol Processes)-mode aerosol number in clean marine air masses, suggesting a missing marine aerosol source in the model. The SOAP data will be further examined for evidence of nucleation events and also to identify relationships between MBL composition and surface ocean biogeochemistry that may provide potential proxies for aerosol precursors and production.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Law, CS
Smith, MJ
Harvey, MJ
Bell, TG
Cravigan, LT
Elliott, FC
Lawson, SJ
Lizotte, M
Marriner, A
McGregor, J
Ristovski, Z
Safi, KA
Saltzman, ES
Vaattovaara, P
Walker, CF
spellingShingle Law, CS
Smith, MJ
Harvey, MJ
Bell, TG
Cravigan, LT
Elliott, FC
Lawson, SJ
Lizotte, M
Marriner, A
McGregor, J
Ristovski, Z
Safi, KA
Saltzman, ES
Vaattovaara, P
Walker, CF
Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign
author_facet Law, CS
Smith, MJ
Harvey, MJ
Bell, TG
Cravigan, LT
Elliott, FC
Lawson, SJ
Lizotte, M
Marriner, A
McGregor, J
Ristovski, Z
Safi, KA
Saltzman, ES
Vaattovaara, P
Walker, CF
author_sort Law, CS
title Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign
title_short Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign
title_full Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign
title_fullStr Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign
title_full_unstemmed Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign
title_sort overview and preliminary results of the surface ocean aerosol production (soap) campaign
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2017
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op_coverage 13645 - 13667
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geographic Aitken
Austral
New Zealand
Pacific
Southern Ocean
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New Zealand
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op_source Law, CS; Smith, MJ; Harvey, MJ; Bell, TG; Cravigan, LT; Elliott, FC; et al.(2017). Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 17(22), 13645 - 13667. doi:10.5194/acp-17-13645-2017. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9rv0k3gc
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spelling ftcdlib:qt9rv0k3gc 2023-05-15T18:26:03+02:00 Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign Law, CS Smith, MJ Harvey, MJ Bell, TG Cravigan, LT Elliott, FC Lawson, SJ Lizotte, M Marriner, A McGregor, J Ristovski, Z Safi, KA Saltzman, ES Vaattovaara, P Walker, CF 13645 - 13667 2017-11-16 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9rv0k3gc english eng eScholarship, University of California qt9rv0k3gc http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9rv0k3gc public Law, CS; Smith, MJ; Harvey, MJ; Bell, TG; Cravigan, LT; Elliott, FC; et al.(2017). Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 17(22), 13645 - 13667. doi:10.5194/acp-17-13645-2017. UC Irvine: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/9rv0k3gc article 2017 ftcdlib https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-13645-2017 2018-07-06T22:53:01Z Establishing the relationship between marine boundary layer (MBL) aerosols and surface water biogeochemistry is required to understand aerosol and cloud production processes over the remote ocean and represent them more accurately in earth system models and global climate projections. This was addressed by the SOAP (Surface Ocean Aerosol Production) campaign, which examined air.sea interaction over biologically productive frontal waters east of New Zealand. This overview details the objectives, regional context, sampling strategy and provisional findings of a pilot study, PreSOAP, in austral summer 2011 and the following SOAP voyage in late austral summer 2012. Both voyages characterized surface water and MBL composition in three phytoplankton blooms of differing species composition and biogeochemistry, with significant regional correlation observed between chlorophyll a and DMSsw. Surface seawater dimethylsulfide (DMSsw) and associated air.sea DMS flux showed spatial variation during the SOAP voyage, with maxima of 25 nmol L-1and 100 molm-2d-1, respectively, recorded in a dinoflagellate bloom. Inclusion of SOAP data in a regional DMSsw compilation indicates that the current climatological mean is an underestimate for this region of the southwest Pacific. Estimation of the DMS gas transfer velocity (kDMS/by independent techniques of eddy covariance and gradient flux showed good agreement, although both exhibited periodic deviations from model estimates. Flux anomalies were related to surface warming and sea surface microlayer enrichment and also reflected the heterogeneous distribution of DMSsw and the associated flux footprint. Other aerosol precursors measured included the halides and various volatile organic carbon compounds, with first measurements of the short-lived gases glyoxal and methylglyoxal in pristine Southern Ocean marine air indicating an unidentified local source. The application of a real-time clean sector, contaminant markers and a common aerosol inlet facilitated multi-sensor measurement of uncontaminated air. Aerosol characterization identified variable Aitken mode and consistent submicron-sized accumulation and coarse modes. Submicron aerosol mass was dominated by secondary particles containing ammonium sulfate/bisulfate under light winds, with an increase in sea salt under higher wind speeds. MBL measurements and chamber experiments identified a significant organic component in primary and secondary aerosols. Comparison of SOAP aerosol number and size distributions reveals an underprediction in GLOMAP (GLObal Model of Aerosol Processes)-mode aerosol number in clean marine air masses, suggesting a missing marine aerosol source in the model. The SOAP data will be further examined for evidence of nucleation events and also to identify relationships between MBL composition and surface ocean biogeochemistry that may provide potential proxies for aerosol precursors and production. Article in Journal/Newspaper Southern Ocean University of California: eScholarship Aitken ENVELOPE(-44.516,-44.516,-60.733,-60.733) Austral New Zealand Pacific Southern Ocean Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 17 22 13645 13667