Abstract

AbstractThis study investigated ice cloud formation associated with marine bioaerosols over the Southern Ocean (SO) using a combination of cloud particle sensor (CPS) sonde observations, satellite products, reanalysis data, and backward trajectory analysis. The CPS sonde detected ice clouds at temperatures higher than −10°C in the mid‐troposphere near an atmospheric river at high‐latitudes over the SO. Backward trajectory analyses indicated that a mid‐latitude air mass with a high concentration of atmospheric dimethylsulfide (DMS) in the atmospheric boundary layer (<1 km) arrived at the ice cloud formation layer over the high‐latitudes. The DMS in the boundary layer began to increase under high wave conditions, coincident with the highest chlorophyll‐a concentrations in the ocean. These results suggest that bioaerosols emitted from the ocean over the mid‐latitudes acted as ice‐nucleating particles for ice cloud formation over high‐latitudes.

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