Changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the Arctic troposphere

The change in aerosol properties during the transition from the more polluted spring to the clean summer in the Arctic troposphere was studied. A six-year data set of observations from Ny-Ålesund on Svalbard, covering the months April through June, serve as the basis for the characterisation of this...

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Main Authors: A.-C. Engvall, R. Krejci, J. Ström, R. Treffeisen, R. Scheele, O. Hermansen, J. Paatero
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2008-02-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/8/445/2008/acp-8-445-2008.pdf
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spelling doaj-4aa6c739d8ae45dc94771e629b9d5c0d2020-11-25T00:56:06ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242008-02-0183445462Changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the Arctic troposphereA.-C. EngvallR. KrejciJ. StrömR. TreffeisenR. ScheeleO. HermansenJ. PaateroThe change in aerosol properties during the transition from the more polluted spring to the clean summer in the Arctic troposphere was studied. A six-year data set of observations from Ny-Ålesund on Svalbard, covering the months April through June, serve as the basis for the characterisation of this time period. In addition four-day-back trajectories were used to describe air mass histories. The observed transition in aerosol properties from an accumulation-mode dominated distribution to an Aitken-mode dominated distribution is discussed with respect to long-range transport and influences from natural and anthropogenic sources of aerosols and pertinent trace gases. Our study shows that the air-mass transport is an important factor modulating the physical and chemical properties observed. However, the air-mass transport cannot alone explain the annually repeated systematic and rather rapid change in aerosol properties, occurring within a limited time window of approximately 10 days. With a simplified phenomenological model, which delivers the nucleation potential for new-particle formation, we suggest that the rapid shift in aerosol microphysical properties between the Arctic spring and summer is mainly driven by the incoming solar radiation in concert with transport of precursor gases and changes in condensational sink. http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/8/445/2008/acp-8-445-2008.pdf
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language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A.-C. Engvall
R. Krejci
J. Ström
R. Treffeisen
R. Scheele
O. Hermansen
J. Paatero
spellingShingle A.-C. Engvall
R. Krejci
J. Ström
R. Treffeisen
R. Scheele
O. Hermansen
J. Paatero
Changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the Arctic troposphere
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet A.-C. Engvall
R. Krejci
J. Ström
R. Treffeisen
R. Scheele
O. Hermansen
J. Paatero
author_sort A.-C. Engvall
title Changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the Arctic troposphere
title_short Changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the Arctic troposphere
title_full Changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the Arctic troposphere
title_fullStr Changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the Arctic troposphere
title_full_unstemmed Changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the Arctic troposphere
title_sort changes in aerosol properties during spring-summer period in the arctic troposphere
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2008-02-01
description The change in aerosol properties during the transition from the more polluted spring to the clean summer in the Arctic troposphere was studied. A six-year data set of observations from Ny-Ålesund on Svalbard, covering the months April through June, serve as the basis for the characterisation of this time period. In addition four-day-back trajectories were used to describe air mass histories. The observed transition in aerosol properties from an accumulation-mode dominated distribution to an Aitken-mode dominated distribution is discussed with respect to long-range transport and influences from natural and anthropogenic sources of aerosols and pertinent trace gases. Our study shows that the air-mass transport is an important factor modulating the physical and chemical properties observed. However, the air-mass transport cannot alone explain the annually repeated systematic and rather rapid change in aerosol properties, occurring within a limited time window of approximately 10 days. With a simplified phenomenological model, which delivers the nucleation potential for new-particle formation, we suggest that the rapid shift in aerosol microphysical properties between the Arctic spring and summer is mainly driven by the incoming solar radiation in concert with transport of precursor gases and changes in condensational sink.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/8/445/2008/acp-8-445-2008.pdf
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