Vertical distribution of aerosols over the Maritime Continent during El Niño
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Published:2018-05-23
Issue:10
Volume:18
Page:7095-7108
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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:
Cohen Jason BlakeORCID, Ng Daniel Hui Loong, Lim Alan Wei Lun, Chua Xin RongORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The vertical distribution of aerosols over Southeast Asia, a critical factor
impacting aerosol lifetime, radiative forcing, and precipitation, is examined
for the 2006 post El Niño fire burning season. Combining these measurements
with remotely sensed land, fire, and meteorological measurements, and fire
plume modeling, we have reconfirmed that fire radiative power (FRP)
is underestimated over Southeast Asia by MODIS measurements. These results are
derived using a significantly different approach from other previously
attempted approaches found in the literature. The horizontally constrained
Maritime Continent's fire plume median height, using the maximum variance of
satellite observed aerosol optical depth as the spatial and temporal
constraint, is found to be 2.04 ± 1.52 km during the entirety of the
2006 El Niño fire season, and 2.19±1.50 km for October 2006. This
is 0.83 km (0.98 km) higher than random sampling and all other past
studies. Additionally, it is determined that 61 (+6–10) % of the
bottom of the smoke plume and 83 (+8–11) % of the median of the smoke
plume is in the free troposphere during the October maximum; while
49 (+7–9) % and 75 (+12–12) % of the total aerosol plume and
the median of the aerosol plume, are correspondingly found in the free
troposphere during the entire fire season. This vastly different vertical
distribution will have impacts on aerosol lifetime and dispersal. Application
of a simple plume rise model using measurements of fire properties
underestimates the median plume height by 0.26 km over the entire fire
season and 0.34 km over the maximum fire period. It is noted that the model
underestimation over the bottom portions of the plume are much larger. The
center of the plume can be reproduced when fire radiative power is increased
by 20 % (with other parts of the plume ranging from an increase of 0 to
60 % depending on the portion of the plume and the length of the fire
season considered). However, to reduce the biases found, improvements
including fire properties under cloudy conditions, representation of
small-scale convection, and inclusion of aerosol direct and semi-direct
effects are required.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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