Airborne investigation of black carbon interaction with low-level, persistent, mixed-phase clouds in the Arctic summer
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Published:2023-07-18
Issue:14
Volume:23
Page:7955-7973
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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:
Zanatta MarcoORCID, Mertes Stephan, Jourdan OlivierORCID, Dupuy Regis, Järvinen EmmaORCID, Schnaiter MartinORCID, Eppers OliverORCID, Schneider JohannesORCID, Jurányi Zsófia, Herber Andreas
Abstract
Abstract. Aerosol–cloud interaction is considered one of the
largest sources of uncertainty in radiative forcing estimations. To better
understand the role of black carbon (BC) aerosol as a cloud nucleus and the
impact of clouds on its vertical distribution in the Arctic, we report
airborne in situ measurements of BC particles in the European Arctic near
Svalbard during the “Arctic CLoud Observations Using airborne measurements
during polar Day” (ACLOUD) campaign held in the summer of 2017. BC was measured with
a single-particle soot photometer aboard the Polar 6 research aircraft from the lowest atmospheric layer up to approximately 3500 m a.s.l (metres above sea level). During
in-cloud flight transects, BC particles contained in liquid droplets (BC
residuals) were sampled through a counterflow virtual impactor (CVI) inlet.
Four flights, conducted in the presence of low-level, surface-coupled, inside-inversion, and mixed-phase clouds over sea ice, were selected to address
the variability in BC above, below, and within the cloud layer. First, the
increase in size and coating thickness of BC particles from the free
troposphere to the cloud-dominated boundary layer confirmed that ground
observations were not representative of upper atmospheric layers. Second,
although only 1 % of liquid droplets contained a BC particle, the higher
number concentration of BC residuals than BC particles sampled below cloud
indicated that the totality of below-cloud BC was activated by nucleation
scavenging but also that alternative scavenging processes such as the
activation of free-tropospheric BC at the cloud top might occur. Third, the
efficient exchange of aerosol particles at cloud bottom was confirmed by the
similarity of the size distribution of BC residuals and BC particles sampled
below cloud. Last, the increase in the BC residual number concentration
(+31 %) and geometric mean diameter (+38 %) from the cloud top to
the cloud bottom and the absolute enrichment in larger BC residuals compared
with outside of the cloud supported the hypothesis of concomitant scavenging
mechanisms but also suggested the formation of BC agglomerates caused by
cloud processing. The vertical evolution of BC properties from inside the cloud
and below the cloud indicated an efficient aerosol exchange at cloud bottom,
which might include activation, cloud processing, and sub-cloud release of
processed BC agglomerates. In the case of persistent low-level Arctic
clouds, this cycle may reiterate multiple times, adding an additional
degree of complexity to the understanding of cloud processing of BC particles in the Arctic.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft Helmholtz Association
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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