Abstract
The change of the global climate is most pronounced in the Arctic, where the air temperature increases two to three times faster than the global average. This process is associated with an increase in the concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. There are publications predicting the sharp increase of methane emissions into the atmosphere due to permafrost thawing. Therefore, it is important to study how the air composition in the Arctic changes in the changing climate. In the Russian sector of the Arctic, the air composition was measured only in the surface atmospheric layer at the coastal stations or earlier at the drifting stations. Vertical distributions of gas constituents of the atmosphere and aerosol were determined only in few small regions. That is why the integrated experiment was carried out to measure the composition of the troposphere in the entire Russian sector of the Arctic from onboard the Optik Tu-134 aircraft laboratory in the period of September 4 to 17 of 2020. The aircraft laboratory was equipped with contact and remote measurement facilities. The contact facilities were capable of measuring the concentrations of CO2, CH4, O3, CO, NOX, and SO2, as well as the disperse composition of particles in the size range from 3 nm to 32 µm, black carbon, organic and inorganic components of atmospheric aerosol. The remote facilities were operated to measure the water transparency in the upper layer of the ocean, the chlorophyll content in water, and spectral characteristics of the underlying surface. The measured data have shown that the ocean continues absorbing СÐ2. This process is most intense over the Barents and Kara Seas. The recorded methane concentration was increased over all the arctic seas, reaching 2090 ppb in the near-water layer over the Kara Sea. The contents of other gas components and black carbon were close to the background level. In bioaerosol, bacteria predominated among the identified microorganisms. In most samples, they were represented by coccal forms, less often spore-forming and non-spore-bearing rod-shaped bacteria. No dependence of the representation of various bacterial genera on the height and the sampling site was revealed. The most turbid during the experiment was the upper layer of the Chukchi and Bering Seas. The Barents Sea turned out to be the most transparent. The differences in extinction varied more than 1.5 times. In all measurements, except for the Barents Sea, the tendency to an increase in chlorophyll fluorescence in more transparent waters was observed.
Highlights
45 Nowadays, global warming and the resulting changes in the environment are one of the most important problems classified by the world community as a big challenge
Bacteria predominated among the identified microorganisms
The use of the PMA-12 spectrometer for laser-induced fluorescence (LIF) 290 analysis allows us to record the spectrum of decaying fluorescence of chlorophyll-a contained in all plants in the dark, as well as to analyze the spectra of radiation reflected from the underlying surface
Summary
45 Nowadays, global warming and the resulting changes in the environment are one of the most important problems classified by the world community as a big challenge. No information about the vertical distribution of gas constituents and aerosol, which is very important, as was shown in the analysis of the heating of different atmospheric layers (Kylling et al, 2018; Zhuravleva et al, 2018), because air heating can 70 occur in the surface air layer, and in the middle troposphere This makes difficult the modeling of climatic processes and greatly complicates the forecast of environmental changes. To fill the gap in data on the vertical distribution of gas and aerosol constituents of air over the Russian sector of the Arctic, in 2020 the experiment on sensing of the atmosphere and water surface over all seas of the Arctic Ocean (Barents, Kara, Laptev, East Siberian and Chukchi seas) was carried out from onboard the Optik Tu-134 aircraft laboratory.
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