Contrasting source contributions of Arctic black carbon to atmospheric concentrations, deposition flux, and atmospheric and snow radiative effects
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Published:2022-07-12
Issue:13
Volume:22
Page:8989-9009
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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:
Matsui HitoshiORCID, Mori Tatsuhiro, Ohata ShoORCID, Moteki NobuhiroORCID, Oshima NagaORCID, Goto-Azuma KumikoORCID, Koike MakotoORCID, Kondo YutakaORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Black carbon (BC) particles in the Arctic contribute to
rapid warming of the Arctic by heating the atmosphere and snow and ice
surfaces. Understanding the source contributions to Arctic BC is therefore
important, but they are not well understood, especially those for
atmospheric and snow radiative effects. Here we estimate simultaneously the
source contributions of Arctic BC to near-surface and vertically integrated
atmospheric BC mass concentrations (MBC_SRF and
MBC_COL), BC deposition flux (MBC_DEP), and BC radiative effects at the top of the atmosphere and snow
surface (REBC_TOA and REBC_SNOW)
and show that the source contributions to these five variables are highly
different. In our estimates, Siberia makes the largest contribution to
MBC_SRF, MBC_DEP, and
REBC_SNOW in the Arctic (defined as >70∘ N), accounting for 70 %, 53 %, and 41 %, respectively.
In contrast, Asia's contributions to MBC_COL and
REBC_TOA are largest, accounting for 37 % and 43 %,
respectively. In addition, the contributions of biomass burning sources are
larger (29 %–35 %) to MBC_DEP, REBC_TOA, and REBC_SNOW, which are highest from late spring
to summer, and smaller (5.9 %–17 %) to MBC_SRF and
MBC_COL, whose concentrations are highest from winter to
spring. These differences in source contributions to these five variables
are due to seasonal variations in BC emission, transport, and removal
processes and solar radiation, as well as to differences in radiative effect
efficiency (radiative effect per unit BC mass) among sources. Radiative
effect efficiency varies by a factor of up to 4 among sources (1471–5326 W g−1) depending on lifetimes, mixing states, and heights of BC and
seasonal variations of emissions and solar radiation. As a result, source
contributions to radiative effects and mass concentrations (i.e.,
REBC_TOA and MBC_COL, respectively)
are substantially different. The results of this study demonstrate the
importance of considering differences in the source contributions of Arctic
BC among mass concentrations, deposition, and atmospheric and snow radiative
effects for accurate understanding of Arctic BC and its climate impacts.
Funder
Environmental Restoration and Conservation Agency Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology Nagoya University
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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