Abstract

Columnar aerosol loading and surface level atmospheric black carbon (BC) concentration over the Antarctic are examined using the measurements carried out at the Indian Antarctic stations, Bharati and Maitri, as part of the 36th Indian Scientific Expedition (2016–17) to Antarctica (ISEA). The mean aerosol optical depth (AOD) at wavelength 500 nm at Bharati is observed to be 0.101 ± 0.01, whereas that at Maitri is 0.047 ± 0.003. Columnar aerosol loading at Bharati is found to be more than two times that measured at Maitri. The daily mean surface level atmospheric BC concentration at Bharati in the Austral summer from December 2016 to February 2017 is 24 ± 16.5 ngm−3. Comparison of this measurement with earlier reported values over the same region indicates an increase in surface-level atmospheric BC concentration. Long-term (1997–2017) trend analysis carried out using MERRA-2 aerosol reanalysis data also corroborates the increasing trend in AOD and BC concentration with 0.005 (0.007) yr−1 and 0.3 (0.27) ngm−3 yr−1 over Bharati (Maitri) respectively. Spectral variations of aerosol absorption coefficients show absorption angstrom exponent values (AAE) close to unity (1.096 ± 0.029), which indicates that fossil fuel emission is the primary source of absorbing aerosols over this region. During the study period, air mass back trajectory analysis indicates that the sources are from the Antarctic, coastal, and southern ocean regions with no long-range transport from other continents in the southern hemisphere.

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