Ambient aerosol properties in the remote atmosphere from global-scale in-situ measurements

In situ measurements of aerosol microphysical, chemical, and optical properties were made during global-scale flights from 2016–2018 as part of the Atmospheric Tomography Mission (ATom). A NASA DC-8 aircraft flew from ~84 °N to ~86 °S latitude over the Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic, and Southern oceans...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brock, Charles A., Froyd, Karl D., Dollner, Maximilian, Williamson, Christina J., Schill, Gregory, Murphy, Daniel M., Wagner, Nicholas J., Kupc, Agnieszka, Jimenez, Jose L., Campuzano-Jost, Pedro, Nault, Benjamin A., Schroder, Jason C., Day, Douglas A., Price, Derek J., Weinzierl, Bernadett, Schwarz, Joshua P., Katich, Joseph M., Zeng, Linghan, Weber, Rodney, Dibb, Jack, Scheuer, Eric, Diskin, Glenn S., DiGangi, Joshua P., Bui, ThaoPaul, Dean-Day, Jonathan M., Thompson, Chelsea R., Peischl, Jeff, Ryerson, Thomas B., Bourgeois, Ilann, Daube, Bruce C., Commane, Róisín, Wofsy, Steven C.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2021-173
https://acp.copernicus.org/preprints/acp-2021-173/
Description
Summary:In situ measurements of aerosol microphysical, chemical, and optical properties were made during global-scale flights from 2016–2018 as part of the Atmospheric Tomography Mission (ATom). A NASA DC-8 aircraft flew from ~84 °N to ~86 °S latitude over the Pacific, Atlantic, Arctic, and Southern oceans while profiling nearly continuously between altitudes of ~160 m and ~12 km. These global circuits were made once each season. Particle size distributions measured in the aircraft cabin at dry conditions and with an underwing probe at ambient conditions were combined with bulk and single-particle composition observations and measurements of water vapor, pressure and temperature to estimate aerosol hygroscopicity and hygroscopic growth factors and calculate size distributions at ambient relative humidity. These reconstructed, composition-resolved ambient size distributions were used to estimate intensive and extensive aerosol properties, including single scatter albedo, asymmetry parameter, extinction, absorption, Ångström exponents, and aerosol optical depth (AOD) at several wavelengths, as well as CCN concentrations at fixed supersaturations and lognormal fits to four modes. Dry extinction and absorption were compared with direct, in situ measurements, and AOD derived from the extinction profiles was compared with remotely sensed AOD measurements from the ground-based Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET); these calculated parameters were in agreement with the direct observations within expected uncertainties. The purpose of this work is to describe the methodology by which ambient aerosol properties are estimated from the in situ measurements, provide statistical descriptions of the aerosol characteristics of different remote air mass types, examine the contributions to AOD from different aerosol types in different air masses, and provide an entry point to the ATom aerosol database. The contributions of different aerosol types (dust, sea salt, biomass burning, etc.) to AOD generally align with expectations based on location of the profiles relative to continental sources of aerosols, with sea salt and aerosol water dominating the column extinction in most remote environments and dust and biomass burning (BB) particles contributing substantially to AOD, especially downwind of the African continent. Contributions of dust and BB aerosols to AOD were also significant in the free troposphere over the North Pacific. Comparisons of lognormally fitted size distribution parameters to values in a database commonly used in global models show significant differences in the mean diameters and standard deviations for accumulation-mode particles and coarse-mode dust. In contrast, comparisons of lognormal parameters derived from the ATom data with previously published ship-borne measurements in the remote marine boundary layer show general agreement. The dataset resulting from this work can be used to improve global-scale representation of climate-relevant aerosol properties in remote air masses through comparison with output from global models and with assumptions used in retrievals of aerosol properties from both ground-based and satellite remote sensing.