Abstract

Abstract. Information about aerosols in the Earth's atmosphere is of a great importance in the scientific community. While tropospheric aerosol influences the radiative balance of the troposphere and affects human health, stratospheric aerosol plays an important role in atmospheric chemistry and climate change. In particular, information about the amount and distribution of stratospheric aerosols is required to initialize climate models, as well as validate aerosol microphysics models and investigate geoengineering. In addition, good knowledge of stratospheric aerosol loading is needed to increase the retrieval accuracy of key trace gases (e.g. ozone or water vapour) when interpreting remote sensing measurements of the scattered solar light. The most commonly used characteristics to describe stratospheric aerosols are the aerosol extinction coefficient and Ångström coefficient. However, the use of particle size distribution parameters along with the aerosol number density is a more optimal approach. In this paper we present a new retrieval algorithm to obtain the particle size distribution of stratospheric aerosol from space-borne observations of the scattered solar light in the limb-viewing geometry. While the mode radius and width of the aerosol particle size distribution are retrieved, the aerosol particle number density profile remains unchanged. The latter is justified by a lower sensitivity of the limb-scattering measurements to changes in this parameter. To our knowledge this is the first data set providing two parameters of the particle size distribution of stratospheric aerosol from space-borne measurements of scattered solar light. Typically, the mode radius and w can be retrieved with an uncertainty of less than 20 %. The algorithm was successfully applied to the tropical region (20° N–20° S) for 10 years (2002–2012) of SCIAMACHY observations in limb-viewing geometry, establishing a unique data set. Analysis of this new climatology for the particle size distribution parameters showed clear increases in the mode radius after the tropical volcanic eruptions, whereas no distinct behaviour of the absolute distribution width could be identified. A tape recorder, which describes the time lag as the perturbation propagates to higher altitudes, was identified for both parameters after the volcanic eruptions. A quasi-biannual oscillation (QBO) pattern at upper altitudes (28–32 km) is prominent in the anomalies of the analysed parameters. A comparison of the aerosol effective radii derived from SCIAMACHY and SAGE II data was performed. The average difference is found to be around 30 % at the lower altitudes, decreasing with increasing height to almost zero around 30 km. The data sample available for the comparison is, however, relatively small.

Highlights

  • Stratospheric aerosols are of a great interest for researchers because of their impact on the climate

  • (2011), smaller volcanic eruptions noticeably affect the global temperature. Another important role of aerosols is their ability to act as condensation nuclei for polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs), which provide surface for heterogeneous chlorine activation and denitrification processes, increasing ozone depletion (Solomon, 1999)

  • We focus our initial study in the tropics because the transport mechanisms here are less complicated, which makes the interpretation of the obtained results more straightforward

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Summary

Introduction

Stratospheric aerosols are of a great interest for researchers because of their impact on the climate. Malinina et al.: SCIAMACHY aerosol particle size (2011), smaller volcanic eruptions noticeably affect the global temperature Another important role of aerosols is their ability to act as condensation nuclei for polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs), which provide surface for heterogeneous chlorine activation and denitrification processes, increasing ozone depletion (Solomon, 1999). OSIRIS (Optical Spectrograph and InfraRed Imager System), on board the Odin satellite, which was launched in 2001 and is still operating, measures scattered solar light in the limb-viewing geometry (Llewellyn et al, 2004) Using these data, aerosol extinction profiles and Ångström coefficient are retrieved (Bourassa et al, 2012; Rieger et al, 2014).

SCIAMACHY on Envisat
Aerosol parametrization
Algorithm description
Model simulations
Characterization of the retrieval
Results and discussion
Sep 2007 5 Apr 2007 31 Nov 2007
Comparison with SAGE II
Conclusions
Full Text
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