The seasonal cycle of ice-nucleating particles linked to the abundance of biogenic aerosol in boreal forests
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Published:2021-03-16
Issue:5
Volume:21
Page:3899-3918
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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:
Schneider Julia, Höhler Kristina, Heikkilä PaavoORCID, Keskinen Jorma, Bertozzi BarbaraORCID, Bogert Pia, Schorr Tobias, Umo Nsikanabasi SilasORCID, Vogel Franziska, Brasseur ZoéORCID, Wu Yusheng, Hakala SimoORCID, Duplissy JonathanORCID, Moisseev DmitriORCID, Kulmala MarkkuORCID, Adams Michael P., Murray Benjamin J.ORCID, Korhonen Kimmo, Hao Liqing, Thomson Erik S.ORCID, Castarède DimitriORCID, Leisner Thomas, Petäjä TuukkaORCID, Möhler Ottmar
Abstract
Abstract. Ice-nucleating particles (INPs) trigger the formation of cloud ice crystals in the atmosphere. Therefore, they strongly influence cloud microphysical and optical properties and precipitation and the life cycle of clouds. Improving weather forecasting and climate projection requires an appropriate formulation of atmospheric INP concentrations. This remains challenging as the global INP distribution and variability depend
on a variety of aerosol types and sources, and neither their short-term
variability nor their long-term seasonal cycles are well covered by
continuous measurements. Here, we provide the first year-long set of
observations with a pronounced INP seasonal cycle in a boreal forest
environment. Besides the observed seasonal cycle in INP concentrations with
a minimum in wintertime and maxima in early and late summer, we also provide indications for a seasonal variation in the prevalent INP type. We show that the seasonal dependency of INP concentrations and prevalent INP types is most likely driven by the abundance of biogenic aerosol. As current parameterizations do not reproduce this variability, we suggest a new mechanistic description for boreal forest environments which considers the seasonal variation in INP concentrations. For this, we use the ambient air temperature measured close to the ground at 4.2 m height as a proxy for the season, which appears to affect the source strength of biogenic emissions and, thus, the INP abundance over the boreal forest. Furthermore, we provide new INP parameterizations based on the Ice Nucleation Active Surface Site (INAS) approach, which specifically describes the ice nucleation activity of boreal aerosols particles prevalent in different seasons. Our results characterize the boreal forest as an important but variable INP source and provide new perspectives to describe these new findings in atmospheric models.
Funder
Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung Maj ja Tor Nesslingin Säätiö European Research Council NERC Environmental Bioinformatics Centre Academy of Finland Helmholtz Association Horizon 2020
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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