Abstract

The study of the long-range transport of biomass burning products from Siberian wildfires into the Arctic atmosphere during the period of 2000-2019 is presented. An analysis of the characteristics of forest fires over the past 20 years revealed an increase in radiation power of an average Siberian wildfire, which is characterized by a statistically significant linear trend of 1.7 ± 1.0% / year. A joint analysis of fire activity in Siberian forests, as well as the contents of the black carbon (BC) and carbon monoxide (CO) contents in the Arctic atmosphere, indicates that extreme fire events force the development of regional anomalies in BC and CO. Correlation between the anomalies of BC (CO) over the Russian segment of the Arctic and the number of Siberian wildfires is found to be statistically significant at the α = 0.05 level and reach the value r = 0.77 (0.48) during the summer months. Using a linear regression model, an estimate of the sensitivity of changes in the total BC content and in the volume mixing ratio of CO at the 700-hPa level in the 1.910-8 kg⋅m-2 per 1000 fires and 0.4 ppbv per 1000 fires, respectively. The results of a detailed analysis of the long-range BC transport into the Arctic during catastrophic Siberian wildfires in the summer of 2019 are presented. It is shown that the considered episode was conditioned by the features of the large-scale atmospheric circulation characteristic for the atmospheric blocking event.

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