Evaluating the impact of blowing snow sea salt aerosol on springtime BrO and O3 in the Arctic

We use the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model to examine the influence of bromine release from blowing snow sea salt aerosol (SSA) on springtime bromine activation and O 3 depletion events (ODEs) in the Arctic lower troposphere. We evaluate our simulation against observations of tropospheric BrO ver...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Huang, Jiayue, Jaeglé, Lyatt, Chen, Qianjie, Alexander, Becky, Sherwen, Tomás, Evans, Mat J., Theys, Nicolas, Choi, Sungyeon
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2019-1094
https://www.atmos-chem-phys-discuss.net/acp-2019-1094/
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Summary:We use the GEOS-Chem chemical transport model to examine the influence of bromine release from blowing snow sea salt aerosol (SSA) on springtime bromine activation and O 3 depletion events (ODEs) in the Arctic lower troposphere. We evaluate our simulation against observations of tropospheric BrO vertical column densities (VCD tropo ) from the GOME-2 and OMI spaceborne instruments for three years (2007–2009), as well as against surface observations of O 3 . We conduct a simulation with blowing snow SSA emissions from first-year sea ice (FYI, with a surface snow salinity of 0.1 psu) and multi-year sea ice (MYI, with a surface snow salinity of 0.05 psu), assuming a factor of 5 bromide enrichment of surface snow relative to seawater. This simulation captures the magnitude of observed March–April GOME-2 and OMI VCD tropo to within 17 %, as well as their spatiotemporal variability (r = 0.76-0.85). Many of the large-scale bromine explosions are successfully reproduced, with the exception of events in May, which are absent or systematically underpredicted in the model. If we assume a lower salinity on MYI (0.01 psu) some of the bromine explosions events observed over MYI are not captured, suggesting that blowing snow over MYI is an important source of bromine activation. We find that the modeled atmospheric deposition onto snow-covered sea ice becomes highly enriched in bromide, increasing from enrichment factors of ~ 5 in September–February to 10–60 in May, consistent with freshly fallen snow composition observations. We propose that this progressive enrichment in deposition could enable blowing snow-induced halogen activation to propagate into May and might explain our late-spring underestimate in VCD tropo . We estimate that atmospheric deposition of SSA could increase snow salinity by up to 0.04 psu between February and April, which could be an important source of salinity for surface snow on MYI as well as FYI covered by deep snowpack. Inclusion of halogen release from blowing snow SSA in our simulations decreases monthly mean Arctic surface O 3 by 4–8 ppbv (15–30 %) in March and 8–14 ppbv (30–40 %) in April. We reproduce a transport event of depleted O 3 Arctic air down to 40º N observed at many sub-Arctic surface sites in early April 2007. While our simulation captures a few ODEs observed at coastal Arctic surface sites, it underestimates the magnitude of other events and entirely misses some events. We suggest that inclusion of direct snowpack activation, which is a strong local source of Br radicals in the shallow Arctic boundary layer, could help reconcile the success of our simulation at capturing satellite retrievals of VCD tropo with its difficulty in reproducing local ODEs.