Abstract

Abstract. Chemical composition, microphysical, and optical properties of atmospheric aerosol deep inland in the Negev Desert of Israel are found to be influenced by daily occurrences of sea breeze flow from the Mediterranean Sea. Abrupt increases in aerosol volume concentration and shifts of size distributions towards larger sizes, which are associated with increase in wind speed and atmospheric water content, were systematically recorded during the summertime at a distance of at least 80 km from the coast. Chemical imaging of aerosol samples showed an increased contribution of highly hygroscopic particles during the intrusion of the sea breeze. Besides a significant fraction of marine aerosols, the amount of internally mixed marine and mineral dust particles was also increased during the sea breeze period. The number fraction of marine and internally mixed particles during the sea breeze reached up to 88 % in the PM1–2. 5 and up to 62 % in the PM2. 5–10 size range. Additionally, numerous particles with residuals of liquid coating were observed by SEM/EDX analysis. Ca-rich dust particles that had reacted with anthropogenic nitrates were evidenced by Raman microspectroscopy. The resulting hygroscopic particles can deliquesce at very low relative humidity. Our observations suggest that aerosol hygroscopic growth in the Negev Desert is induced by the daily sea breeze arrival. The varying aerosol microphysical and optical characteristics perturb the solar and thermal infrared radiations. The changes in aerosol properties induced by the sea breeze, relative to the background situation, doubled the shortwave radiative cooling at the surface (from −10 to −20.5 W m−2) and increased by almost 3 times the warming of the atmosphere (from 5 to 14 W m−2), as evaluated for a case study. Given the important value of observed liquid coating of particles, we also examined the possible influence of the particle homogeneity assumption on the retrieval of aerosol microphysical characteristics. The tests suggest that sensitivity to the coating appears if backward scattering and polarimetric measurements are available for the inversion algorithm. This may have an important implication for retrievals of aerosol microphysical properties in remote sensing applications.

Highlights

  • Chemical composition and mixing state of atmospheric particles evolve during their transport in the atmosphere leading to changes in the aerosol optical properties and radiative effect

  • The ground-based lidar observations at the Sede Boker site are conducted as part of the NASA Micro-Pulse Lidar Network (MPLNET) (Welton et al, 2001), wherein sites are generally co-located with the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) sites

  • The influence of the sea breeze on the atmospheric aerosol chemical composition, microphysical, optical, and radiative characteristics in the Negev Desert of Israel during summertime is shown for the first time and discussed in detail

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Summary

Introduction

Chemical composition and mixing state of atmospheric particles evolve during their transport in the atmosphere leading to changes in the aerosol optical properties and radiative effect. We explore the influence of penetrating marine air masses on the mixing state and hygroscopic properties of aerosol particles observed at Sede Boker, a desert site located 80 km away from the Mediterranean coast (the site is sometimes referred to as Sde Boker) The dust at this site originates from either local or remote dust sources. The regular intrusion of the sea breeze is employed to elucidate of how the evolution of humid conditions accompanied with the intrusion of aged sea-salt and pollution aerosols modifies the mixing state of mineral dust and how this affects the aerosol radiative effect To address this goal, we employ a multidisciplinary approach by utilizing a combination of comprehensive remote sensing observations coupled with in situ aerosol measurements and offline chemical imaging of atmospheric particles collected at the site. Effects of internally mixed particles on their optical properties and consequent implications for remote sensing algorithms are discussed

Measurement site and meteorological conditions
16 August 2012
Remote sensing setup
Thermal infrared radiometer
Broadband solar flux
Backward trajectories
Integrating nephelometer
Aerosol sampling
Chemical characterization at the particle scale
Raman microspectroscopy
Remote sensing observations
16 Aug 2012
Dust season March– April 2012
Individual particle analysis
Raman maps of particles
The impact of the sea breeze on the aerosol radiative effect
Aerosol core–shell structure and implication for remote sensing
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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