Characterization of aerosol number size distributions and their effect on cloud properties at Syowa Station, Antarctica

We took aerosol measurements at Syowa Station, Antarctica to characterize the aerosol number–size distribution and other aerosol physicochemical properties. Four modal structures (i.e., mono-, bi-, tri-, and quad-modal) were identified in aerosol size distributions during measurements. Particularly,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hara, Keiichiro, Nishita-Hara, Chiharu, Osada, Kazuo, Yabuki, Masanori, Yamanouchi, Takashi
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2021-24
https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/acp-2021-24/
Description
Summary:We took aerosol measurements at Syowa Station, Antarctica to characterize the aerosol number–size distribution and other aerosol physicochemical properties. Four modal structures (i.e., mono-, bi-, tri-, and quad-modal) were identified in aerosol size distributions during measurements. Particularly, quad-modal structures were associated closely with new particle formation (NPF). To elucidate where NPF proceeds in the Antarctic, we compared the aerosol size distributions and modal structure to air mass origins computed using backward trajectory analysis. Results of this comparison imply that NPF occurred in free troposphere during spring and autumn, and in the free troposphere and boundary layer during summer. Photochemical gaseous products, coupled with UV radiation, play an important role in NPF, even in the Antarctic troposphere. With the appearance of the ozone hole in the Antarctic stratosphere, more UV radiation can enhance atmospheric chemistry, even near the surface in the Antarctic. However, linkage among tropospheric aerosols in the Antarctic, ozone hole, and UV enhancement is unknown. Results demonstrated that NPF started in the Antarctic free troposphere already in the end-August – early September by UV enhancement resulting from the ozone hole. Then, aerosol particles supplied from NPF during spring grow gradually by vapor condensation, suggesting modification of aerosol properties such as number concentrations and size distributions in the Antarctic troposphere during summer. Here, we assess the hypothesis that UV enhancement in the upper troposphere by the Antarctic ozone hole modifies the aerosol population, aerosol size distribution, cloud condensation nuclei capabilities, and cloud properties in Antarctic regions during summer.