Marine productivity and synoptic meteorology drive summer-time variability in Southern Ocean aerosols
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Published:2020-07-10
Issue:13
Volume:20
Page:8047-8062
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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:
Alroe JoelORCID, Cravigan Luke T.ORCID, Miljevic Branka, Johnson Graham R., Selleck Paul, Humphries Ruhi S.ORCID, Keywood Melita D.ORCID, Chambers Scott D.ORCID, Williams Alastair G.ORCID, Ristovski Zoran D.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Cloud–radiation interactions over the Southern Ocean are not well
constrained in climate models, in part due to uncertainties in the sources,
concentrations, and cloud-forming potential of aerosol in this region. To date, most studies in this region have reported measurements from fixed
terrestrial stations or a limited set of instrumentation and often present findings as broad seasonal or latitudinal trends. Here, we present an
extensive set of aerosol and meteorological observations obtained during an
austral summer cruise across the full width of the Southern Ocean south of
Australia. Three episodes of continental-influenced air masses were
identified, including an apparent transition between the Ferrel atmospheric
cell and the polar cell at approximately 64∘ S, and accompanied
by the highest median cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentrations, at
252 cm−3. During the other two episodes, synoptic-scale weather
patterns diverted air masses across distances greater than 1000 km from the
Australian and Antarctic coastlines, respectively, indicating that a large
proportion of the Southern Ocean may be periodically influenced by
continental air masses. In all three cases, a highly cloud-active
accumulation mode dominated the size distribution, with up to 93 % of the
total number concentration activating as CCN. Frequent cyclonic weather
conditions were observed at high latitudes and the associated strong wind
speeds led to predictions of high concentrations of sea spray aerosol.
However, these modelled concentrations were not achieved due to increased
aerosol scavenging rates from precipitation and convective transport into
the free troposphere, which decoupled the air mass from the sea spray flux
at the ocean surface. CCN concentrations were more strongly impacted by high
concentrations of large-diameter Aitken mode aerosol in air masses which
passed over regions of elevated marine biological productivity, potentially
contributing up to 56 % of the cloud condensation nuclei concentration.
Weather systems were vital for aerosol growth in biologically influenced air
masses and in their absence ultrafine aerosol diameters were less than
30 nm. These results demonstrate that air mass meteorological history must
be considered when modelling sea spray concentrations and highlight the
potential importance of sub-grid-scale variability when modelling atmospheric conditions in the remote Southern Ocean.
Funder
Australian Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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