Abstract

Sea salt aerosol (SSA) significantly affects the atmospheric albedo, the radiation balance of the Earth, and has consequences for global and regional climate. There is currently no reliable radiative large-scale aerosol model of the marine and coastal atmosphere. All these lead to uncertainties in radiation boxes, short-term weather forecasts, and climate models and to uncertainties in interpretation of the lidar return data obtained and at the development of new lidar systems. The MaexPro model is shown to calculate adequately the aerosol extinction coefficients $\varepsilon (\lambda)$ and the concentration of SSA particles for different wind regimes, fetches, and humidity. The calculated $\varepsilon (\lambda)$ profiles well agree with the experimental data and with calculations using Advanced Navy Aerosol Model (ANAM) and MODTRAN codes. A new approach in studying the influence of the meteorological parameters on spectral $\varepsilon (\lambda)$ gives a new explanation for previously obtained conflicting experimental data, namely, to the effect of decreasing transparency, manifested in the coastal zone, and makes it possible indirectly to account for the type of air mass (marine or coastal). It is shown that the particle size distribution functions and spectral $\varepsilon (\lambda)$ , calculated using the model with the input parameters corresponding most closely to the conditions of experiment, agree well with observations, using OLAF transmissometer, and calculations using MODTRAN code and the experimental results receiving the same conditions of observations (numerical or field). The results obtained are of interest both in the calculations of radiative characteristics of the atmosphere and in interpretation of the lidar return data and calibration signal when developing new lidar systems.

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