Aerosol Deposition and Snow Accumulation Processes From Beryllium‐7 Measurements in the Central Arctic Ocean: Results From the MOSAiC Expedition

Author:

Stephens Mark P.1ORCID,Marsay Chris M.23ORCID,Schneebeli Martin4ORCID,Landing William M.5ORCID,Buck Clifton S.2ORCID,Geibert Walter6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Applied Research Center Florida International University Miami FL USA

2. Skidaway Institute of Oceanography University of Georgia Savannah GA USA

3. Now at: School of Marine Science and Policy University of Delaware Lewes DE USA

4. WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research SLF Davos Switzerland

5. Department of Earth, Ocean, and Atmospheric Science Florida State University Tallahassee FL USA

6. Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research Alfred Wegener Institute Bremerhaven Germany

Abstract

AbstractWe use a tracer method involving the cosmogenic radioisotope beryllium‐7 (half‐life = 53.3 days) to follow the deposition of aerosols and the fate of snow on the MOSAiC ice floe during winter and spring 2019–2020. When examined alongside data from earlier studies in the Arctic Ocean that covered summer and fall, Be‐7 inventories indicate a summertime peak for aerosol Be‐7 deposition fluxes coinciding with seasonal minima boundary‐level aerosol concentrations, which suggests that deposition fluxes are primarily controlled by precipitation. This conclusion is supported by the linear relationship between Be‐7 fluxes and precipitation rates derived from data from the MOSAiC and SHEBA expeditions. Inventories of Be‐7 within the snow column exhibited evidence of significant redistribution. Be‐7 deficits, relative to the flux, were observed in areas of level sea ice while excess Be‐7 was found associated with deformed ice features such as pressure ridges, leading to the following estimates for the distribution of snow on the ice floe in May 2020: 75–93% of the snow mass is found on deformed sea ice with the remainder on level ice. Furthermore, uncertainties associated with measurements of Be‐7 concentrations within the ocean mixed layer would allow for losses of snow through open leads of up to approximately 20% of the flux. Our snow distribution estimates agree with data from repeat snow depth transect measurements. These results suggest that Be‐7 can be a useful tool in studying snow redistribution.

Funder

Division of Arctic Sciences

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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