Abstract

Factors influencing atmospheric visibility (VIS) in coastal areas are more complex than those for inland and far oceans owing to the complex circulation and aerosol sources. This study analyzed the factors influencing VIS under sea-land breeze circulation (SLBC) for different external aerosol sources based on field survey data in southern Chinese coastal areas. First, SLBC characteristics observed during the experiment period showed that on SLBC days, sea breeze occurs more frequently (∼50%) than land breeze (∼27%), and the wind speed (WS) is generally small, with a mean sea and land breeze WSs of ∼2.18 m/s and ∼2.38 m/s, respectively. Then, analysis of factors influencing VIS was conducted for different land/sea breeze conditions and external aerosol source conditions indicated by the HYSPLIT4 model simulations. Results showed that the aerosol particle number concentration (PNC) and relative humidity (RH) both had negative correlations with VIS, while only very weak relationships between WS and VIS were found, possibly due to small WSs on SLBC days or because local aerosols were not pure marine aerosols. Further two-factor analysis of VIS showed that the power-law function relating VIS with PNC in each RH bin ranges from ∼-0.3 to ∼-1.5, and VIS exhibited sharper exponential decline with increasing PNC under high RH. A new method of retrieving aerosol-extinction hygroscopic growth factor (fext) with the measured VIS, RH, and PNC was developed to investigate the optical hygroscopic growth property of aerosols. Results show that aerosols in the study area have similar fext under different land/sea breeze and external aerosol source conditions; the deliquescence RH of aerosols is ∼60%, suggesting that mainly polluted marine aerosol was observed during experiments in this area.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call