Abstract

Abstract. During the monsoon season of the year 2017 the airborne StratoClim mission took place in Kathmandu, Nepal, with eight mission flights of the M-55 Geophysica in the upper troposphere–lower stratosphere (UTLS) of the Asian monsoon anticyclone (AMA) over northern India, Nepal, and Bangladesh. More than 100 events of new particle formation (NPF) were observed. In total, more than 2 h of flight time was spent under NPF conditions as indicated by the abundant presence of nucleation-mode aerosols, i.e. with particle diameters dp smaller than 15 nm, which were detected in situ by means of condensation nuclei counting techniques. Mixing ratios of nucleation-mode particles (nnm) of up to ∼ 50 000 mg−1 were measured at heights of 15–16 km (θ ≈ 370 K). NPF was most frequently observed at ∼ 12–16 km altitude (θ ≈ 355–380 K) and mainly below the tropopause. Resulting nnm remained elevated (∼ 300–2000 mg−1) up to altitudes of ∼ 17.5 km (θ ≈ 400 K), while under NPF conditions the fraction (f) of sub-micrometre-sized non-volatile residues (dp > 10 nm) remained below 50 %. At ∼ 12–14 km (θ ≈ 355–365 K) the minimum of f (< 15 %) was found, and underneath, the median f generally remains below 25 %. The persistence of particles at nucleation-mode sizes is limited to a few hours, mainly due to coagulation, as demonstrated by a numerical simulation. The frequency of NPF events observed during StratoClim 2017 underlines the importance of the AMA as a source region for UTLS aerosols and for the formation and maintenance of the Asian tropopause aerosol layer (ATAL). The observed abundance of NPF-produced nucleation-mode particles within the AMA is not unambiguously attributable to (a) specific source regions in the boundary layer (according to backward trajectory analyses), or (b) the direct supply with precursor material by convective updraught (from correlations of NPF with carbon monoxide), or (c) the recent release of NPF-capable material from the convective outflow (according to air mass transport times in the tropical tropopause layer, TTL). Temperature anomalies with ΔT of 2 K (peak-to-peak amplitude), as observed at a horizontal wavelength of ∼ 70–100 km during a level flight of several hours, match with NPF detections and represent an additional mechanism for local increases in supersaturation of the NPF precursors. Effective precursor supply and widely distributed temperature anomalies within the AMA can explain the higher frequency of intense NPF observed during StratoClim 2017 than all previous NPF detections with COPAS (COndensation PArticle counting System) at TTL levels over Brazil, northern Australia, or West Africa.

Highlights

  • Aerosol particles in the upper troposphere–lower stratosphere (UTLS) influence the radiative balance of the Earth’s atmosphere, stratospheric chemistry, and properties of cirrus clouds near the tropopause (Kremser et al, 2016)

  • The present study aims at a classification of encountered new particle formation (NPF) events with regard to

  • The presented analysis comprises the description and discussion of numerous events of new particle formation (NPF), which were observed in the UTLS region of the Asian monsoon anticyclone (AMA) over northern India, Nepal, and Bangladesh

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosol particles in the upper troposphere–lower stratosphere (UTLS) influence the radiative balance of the Earth’s atmosphere, stratospheric chemistry, and properties of cirrus clouds near the tropopause (Kremser et al, 2016). The particles include fractions of non-volatile (or refractory) material Chemical and microphysical processes, which involve the stratospheric aerosol, could be influenced by solutes that, for example, had previously been constituents of the refractory aerosol compounds. Schneider et al (2021) recently provided laser ablation mass spectrometric analyses of refractory particles in the LS region between the Equator and the Arctic, which indicate detectable signatures of meteoric ablation material at all sample locations in the LS. They assume that the meteoric ablation material is partly present as a solute or as insoluble inclusion within stratospheric H2SO4–H2O droplets

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