Bulk Attenuation Properties of Tropospheric Aerosols as Determined by Surface Measurements

Cloudless sky values of aerosol attenuation coefficient, scattering, absorption, recovery rate, bulk scattering albedo, and absorption to backscatter ratio were evaluated from surface measurements of global, diffuse, and direct beam irradiances for Montreal and Woodbridge (1968-78), Goose (1968-77),...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Uboegbulam, Chukuemeka Timothy
Other Authors: Davies, J.A., Geography
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11375/6336
id ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/6336
record_format openpolar
spelling ftmcmaster:oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/6336 2023-05-15T13:11:45+02:00 Bulk Attenuation Properties of Tropospheric Aerosols as Determined by Surface Measurements Uboegbulam, Chukuemeka Timothy Davies, J.A. Geography 2010-03-21 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/6336 unknown opendissertations/1653 2040 1237135 http://hdl.handle.net/11375/6336 Geography thesis 2010 ftmcmaster 2022-03-22T21:09:38Z Cloudless sky values of aerosol attenuation coefficient, scattering, absorption, recovery rate, bulk scattering albedo, and absorption to backscatter ratio were evaluated from surface measurements of global, diffuse, and direct beam irradiances for Montreal and Woodbridge (1968-78), Goose (1968-77), Charlottetown and Vancouver (1977-78), Winnipeg (1977), Hamilton (summer, 1977), and Sal (Cape Verde Islands, West Africa, summer, 1974). The mean value of the coefficient (~0.64) indicates that turbidity of the Saharan dust at Sal is comparable to those of heavily industrialized cities of Europe and Eastern United States but in Canada, the mean values (0.10 - 0.20) for urban areas are less than those for similar cities in the world. The mean value at Goose (~0.05) is typical for the sub-Arctic. For the Canadian locations, maximum values of the coefficient (~ 0.64 for Montreal) occur in summer and the minimum (0.001) in winter but at Sal, maximum values (> 1.0) are reached during the Saharan dust outbreaks that occur once in 4 to 5 days in summer. Comparison of some meteorological parameters with the values of the coefficient for Montreal and Woodbridge show: a slight inverse relationship with windspeed; maximum values that are generally associated with winds from between southwest and southeast and minimum values associated with winds from between northwest and northeast; a direct positive correlation with dew point temperature and also for relative humidity < 70%; that for visibility more than 10 km there is a strong linear relationship between turbidity and the inverse of visibility. Mean annual values of the coefficient indicate significant downward trends in cloudless sky turbidity at Montreal and Woodbridge from 1968 to 1978 and at Goose from 1968 to 1977. The amount of radiation scattered in a forward direction (downward) by aerosol is much larger at Sal (about 42% of global irradiance) than in Canada (6 - 13% of global irradiance). In Canada, aerosol absorption and backscatter are respectively 2-9% and 2-3% of global irradiance compared with 10% absorption and 7% backscatter at Sal. Aerosol recovery rates are least at Montreal. Estimates of bulk scattering albedo for Canadian urban sites (0.6 to 0.8) fall within the range of single scattering albedo values for American locations. Mean values of the absorption to backscatter ratio indicate that, considering the solar radiation balance, aerosols over Montreal, Woodbridge, Hamilton and Goose could induce warming of the Earth-atmosphere system. Aerosols over Vancouver, Winnipeg, Charlottetown and Sal could induce cooling of the system. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Thesis albedo Arctic MacSphere (McMaster University) Arctic Canada Charlottetown ENVELOPE(-56.120,-56.120,52.770,52.770)
institution Open Polar
collection MacSphere (McMaster University)
op_collection_id ftmcmaster
language unknown
topic Geography
spellingShingle Geography
Uboegbulam, Chukuemeka Timothy
Bulk Attenuation Properties of Tropospheric Aerosols as Determined by Surface Measurements
topic_facet Geography
description Cloudless sky values of aerosol attenuation coefficient, scattering, absorption, recovery rate, bulk scattering albedo, and absorption to backscatter ratio were evaluated from surface measurements of global, diffuse, and direct beam irradiances for Montreal and Woodbridge (1968-78), Goose (1968-77), Charlottetown and Vancouver (1977-78), Winnipeg (1977), Hamilton (summer, 1977), and Sal (Cape Verde Islands, West Africa, summer, 1974). The mean value of the coefficient (~0.64) indicates that turbidity of the Saharan dust at Sal is comparable to those of heavily industrialized cities of Europe and Eastern United States but in Canada, the mean values (0.10 - 0.20) for urban areas are less than those for similar cities in the world. The mean value at Goose (~0.05) is typical for the sub-Arctic. For the Canadian locations, maximum values of the coefficient (~ 0.64 for Montreal) occur in summer and the minimum (0.001) in winter but at Sal, maximum values (> 1.0) are reached during the Saharan dust outbreaks that occur once in 4 to 5 days in summer. Comparison of some meteorological parameters with the values of the coefficient for Montreal and Woodbridge show: a slight inverse relationship with windspeed; maximum values that are generally associated with winds from between southwest and southeast and minimum values associated with winds from between northwest and northeast; a direct positive correlation with dew point temperature and also for relative humidity < 70%; that for visibility more than 10 km there is a strong linear relationship between turbidity and the inverse of visibility. Mean annual values of the coefficient indicate significant downward trends in cloudless sky turbidity at Montreal and Woodbridge from 1968 to 1978 and at Goose from 1968 to 1977. The amount of radiation scattered in a forward direction (downward) by aerosol is much larger at Sal (about 42% of global irradiance) than in Canada (6 - 13% of global irradiance). In Canada, aerosol absorption and backscatter are respectively 2-9% and 2-3% of global irradiance compared with 10% absorption and 7% backscatter at Sal. Aerosol recovery rates are least at Montreal. Estimates of bulk scattering albedo for Canadian urban sites (0.6 to 0.8) fall within the range of single scattering albedo values for American locations. Mean values of the absorption to backscatter ratio indicate that, considering the solar radiation balance, aerosols over Montreal, Woodbridge, Hamilton and Goose could induce warming of the Earth-atmosphere system. Aerosols over Vancouver, Winnipeg, Charlottetown and Sal could induce cooling of the system. Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
author2 Davies, J.A.
Geography
format Thesis
author Uboegbulam, Chukuemeka Timothy
author_facet Uboegbulam, Chukuemeka Timothy
author_sort Uboegbulam, Chukuemeka Timothy
title Bulk Attenuation Properties of Tropospheric Aerosols as Determined by Surface Measurements
title_short Bulk Attenuation Properties of Tropospheric Aerosols as Determined by Surface Measurements
title_full Bulk Attenuation Properties of Tropospheric Aerosols as Determined by Surface Measurements
title_fullStr Bulk Attenuation Properties of Tropospheric Aerosols as Determined by Surface Measurements
title_full_unstemmed Bulk Attenuation Properties of Tropospheric Aerosols as Determined by Surface Measurements
title_sort bulk attenuation properties of tropospheric aerosols as determined by surface measurements
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/11375/6336
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.120,-56.120,52.770,52.770)
geographic Arctic
Canada
Charlottetown
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Charlottetown
genre albedo
Arctic
genre_facet albedo
Arctic
op_relation opendissertations/1653
2040
1237135
http://hdl.handle.net/11375/6336
_version_ 1766248778717724672