Abstract
The synoptic conditions over the Alaskan Arctic during the Arctic Gas and Aerosol Sampling Program (AGASP) of March 1983 are described. Air mass characteristics are pictured in terms of meteorological parameters, condensation nuclei, ozone and CO 2 concentrations, aerosol size and number distributions, and aerosol scattering coefficients, as measured at the Barrow Geophysical Monitoring for Climatic Change (GMCC) baseline station and by aircraft Latitude-altitude cross sections of meteorological and aerosol parameters indicated both strong vertical and horizontal variability within the Arctic air mass. Aerosol concentrations aloft were usually higher than those measured at the ground and peak-to-peak variations are greater aloft than at the surface, showing that the stable Arctic boundary layer reduces mixing from aloft to the surface. Thus, surface measurements cannot be extrapolated to higher levels in a straightforward manner. Horizontal variability in the haze, as determined by the aircraft, was found to be abrupt and was not generally due to the presence of strong meteorological fronts. During 9–19 March 1983, at least four different air mass types were present in the Barrow region, each of which was characterized by distinct meteorological, aerosol and trace gas characteristics.
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