Abstract

Abstract. We study 41 d with daily median surface accumulation mode aerosol particle concentrations below 50 cm−3 (ultra-clean conditions) observed at Ascension Island (ASI; 7.9∘ S, 14.4∘ W) between June 2016 and October 2017 as part of the Layered Atlantic Smoke Interactions with Clouds (LASIC) campaign. Interestingly, these days occur during a period of great relevance for aerosol–cloud–radiation interactions, the southeast Atlantic (SEATL) biomass-burning season (approximately June–October). That means that these critical months can feature both the highest surface aerosol numbers, from smoke intrusion into the marine boundary layer, as well as the lowest. While carbon monoxide and refractory black carbon concentrations on ultra-clean days do not approach those on days with heavy smoke, they also frequently exceed background concentrations calculated in the non-burning season from December 2016 to April 2017. This is evidence that even what become ultra-clean boundary layers can make contact with and entrain from an overlying SEATL smoke layer before undergoing a process of rapid aerosol removal. Because many ultra-clean and polluted boundary layers observed at Ascension Island during the biomass burning season follow similar isobaric back trajectories, the variability in this entrainment is likely more closely tied to the variability in the overlying smoke rather than large-scale horizontal circulation through the boundary layer. Since exceptionally low accumulation mode aerosol numbers at ASI do not necessarily indicate the relative lack of other trace pollutants, this suggests the importance of regional variations in what constitutes an “ultra-clean” marine boundary layer. Finally, surface drizzle rates, frequencies and accumulation – as well as retrievals of liquid water path – all consistently tend toward higher values on ultra-clean days. This implicates enhanced coalescence scavenging in low clouds as the key driver of ultra-clean events in the southeast Atlantic marine boundary layer. These enhancements occur against and are likely mediated by the backdrop of a seasonal increase in daily mean cloud fraction and daily median liquid water path over ASI, peaking in September and October in both LASIC years. Therefore the seasonality in ultra-clean day occurrence seems directly linked to the seasonality in SEATL cloud properties. These results highlight the importance of two-way aerosol–cloud interactions in the region.

Highlights

  • Cloud-mediated aerosol radiative effects remain a significant source of uncertainty in our understanding of the climate system (Boucher et al, 2013; Rosenfeld et al, 2014)

  • A total of 41 d meet our criteria for ultra-clean conditions in the available Layered Atlantic Smoke Interactions with Clouds (LASIC) data

  • We utilize data collected from an Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Mobile Facility deployed (June 2016– October 2017) to Ascension Island during the LASIC campaign to study 41 d with daily median accumulation mode aerosol concentrations below 50 cm−3

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cloud-mediated aerosol radiative effects remain a significant source of uncertainty in our understanding of the climate system (Boucher et al, 2013; Rosenfeld et al, 2014). The southeast Atlantic (SEATL) is a focal point for studying these effects because biomass-burning aerosol (BBA) particles transported from central and southern Africa frequently overlie a major stratocumulus deck between approximately July and October (Devasthale and Thomas, 2011; Zuidema et al, 2016c). The regional peak in satellite-retrieved cloud fraction and aerosol optical depth, as well as vertical overlap between the smoke layer and clouds, tends to occur between September and October (Adebiyi et al, 2015; Zuidema et al, 2016a). This establishes the potential for a complex web of aerosol–cloud–radiation interactions on seasonal and regional scales. The full role of BBA in the SEATL MBL particle budget and its subsequent interactions with low clouds remains under investigation

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call