Investigating an indirect aviation effect on mid-latitude cirrus clouds – linking lidar-derived optical properties to in situ measurements
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Published:2023-07-26
Issue:14
Volume:23
Page:8369-8381
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Groß SilkeORCID, Jurkat-Witschas Tina, Li QiangORCID, Wirth MartinORCID, Urbanek Benedikt, Krämer MartinaORCID, Weigel RalfORCID, Voigt ChristianeORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Aviation has a large impact on the Earth's atmosphere and climate by various
processes. Line-shaped contrails and contrail cirrus clouds lead to changes
in the natural cirrus cloud cover and have a major contribution to the
effective radiative forcing from aviation. In addition, aviation-induced
aerosols might also change the microphysical properties and optical
properties of naturally formed cirrus clouds. Latter aerosol–cloud
interactions show large differences in the resulting effective radiative
forcing, and our understanding on how aviation-induced aerosols affect cirrus
cloud properties is still poor. Up to now, observations of this aviation-induced aerosol effect have been rare. In this study, we use combined airborne
lidar and in situ ice cloud measurements to investigate differences in the
microphysical and optical properties of naturally formed cirrus clouds,
which formed in regions that are highly affected by aviation-induced aerosol
emissions and, of those, which formed in regions rather unaffected by
aviation. Urbanek et al. (2018) showed that those cirrus clouds, which are
more affected by aviation-induced soot emission, are characterized by larger
values of the particle linear depolarization ratio (PLDR). In this follow-on
study we relate collocated lidar measurements performed aboard HALO during
the ML-CIRRUS mission of the particle linear depolarization ratio with
in situ cloud probe measurements of the number concentration and effective
diameter of the ice particles. In situ measurements for both cloud types
(high-PLDR-mode – aviation-affected – and low-PLDR-mode – pristine – cirrus) can
be reliably compared in a temperature range between 210 and 215 K. Within
this temperature range we find that high-PLDR-mode cirrus clouds tend to
show larger effective ice particle diameters with a median value of 61.4
compared to 50.7 µm for low-PLDR-mode pristine cirrus
clouds. Larger effective ice particles in aviation-influenced (high-PLDR-mode) cirrus are connected to lower ice particle number concentration with a
median value of 0.05 compared to 0.11 cm−3 (low-PLDR-mode),
which evolved in more pristine regions with only little impact from
aviation. We suspect that a suppression of homogeneous ice formation by the
heterogeneously freezing soot aerosol particles included in the areas
affected by air traffic is the cause of the reduced ice crystal
concentrations.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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