Abstract

The ASTAR 2000 (Arctic Study of Tropospheric Aerosol and Radiation) campaign ran from 12 March until 25 April 2000 with extensive flight operations in the vicinity of Svalbard (Norway) from Longyearbyen airport (78.25°N, 15.49°E). It was a joint Japanese (NIPR Tokyo)–German (AWI Bremerhaven/Potsdam) airborne measurement campaign using AWI aircraft POLAR 4 (Dornier 228-101). Simultaneous ground-based measurements were done at the international research site Ny-Ålesund (78.95°N, 11.93°E) in Svalbard, at the German Koldewey station, at the Japanese Rabben station and at the Scandinavian station at Zeppelin Mountain (475 m above sea level). During the campaign 19 profiles of various aerosol properties were measured. In general, the Arctic spring aerosol in the vicinity of Svalbard had significant temporal and vertical variability.A strong haze event occurred between 21 and 25 March in which the optical depth from ground-based observation was 0.18, which was significantly greater than the background value of 0.06. Airborne measurements on 23 March during this haze event showed a high aerosol layer with an extinction coefficient of 0.03 km−1 or more up to 3 km and a scattering coefficient from 0.02 in the same altitude range. From the chemical analyses of airborne measurements, sulfate, soot and sea salt particles were dominant, and there was a high mixing ratio of external soot particles in some layers during the haze event, whereas internal mixing of soot in sulfate was noticeable in some layers for the background condition. We argue that the high aerosol loading is due to direct transport from anthropogenic source regions. In this paper we focus on the course of the haze event in detail through analyses of the airborne and ground-based results.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric aerosols play an important role in global climate change due to their influence on direct and indirect radiative forcing

  • This was useful because the measurement period of the airborne campaign showed variation in the aerosol loading near Svalbard

  • A background situation is characterized by an aerosol optical depth (AOD) of δ aer (λ)

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric aerosols play an important role in global climate change due to their influence on direct and indirect radiative forcing. Their various influences are not well determined yet, especially in polar regions. Climate studies are partly limited by a lack of knowledge about the geographical and seasonal variations of aerosol properties and composition. Arctic conditions, including the chemical composition of aerosol, high surface albedo in spring and long optical path through the atmosphere, are very complex and the influence of Arctic aerosols on the Earth’s radiation balance still remains an open question. With the data acquired to date and those which continue to come in, it will be possible to derive the required input parameters for models such as the regional climate model HIRHAM (Dethloff et al, 1996) to assess the climatic impact of Arctic aerosol

Experimental design and instrumentation
Ground-based observations
A S TA R 2 0 0 0 : ARCTICHAZECASESTU DY
Atmospheric circulation fields and trajectories
Vertical profiles from the surface
Vertical profile from airborne observations
Summary
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