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Aerosol responses to precipitation along North American air trajectories arriving at Bermuda
North American pollution outflow is ubiquitous over the western North Atlantic Ocean, especially in winter, making this location a suitable natural laboratory for investigating the impact of precipitation on aerosol particles along air mass trajectories. We take advantage of observational data colle...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
2021
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8609468/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34819950 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-16121-2021 |
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author | Dadashazar, Hossein Alipanah, Majid Hilario, Miguel Ricardo A. Crosbie, Ewan Kirschler, Simon Liu, Hongyu Moore, Richard H. Peters, Andrew J. Scarino, Amy Jo Shook, Michael Thornhill, K. Lee Voigt, Christiane Wang, Hailong Winstead, Edward Zhang, Bo Ziemba, Luke Sorooshian, Armin |
author_facet | Dadashazar, Hossein Alipanah, Majid Hilario, Miguel Ricardo A. Crosbie, Ewan Kirschler, Simon Liu, Hongyu Moore, Richard H. Peters, Andrew J. Scarino, Amy Jo Shook, Michael Thornhill, K. Lee Voigt, Christiane Wang, Hailong Winstead, Edward Zhang, Bo Ziemba, Luke Sorooshian, Armin |
author_sort | Dadashazar, Hossein |
collection | PubMed |
description | North American pollution outflow is ubiquitous over the western North Atlantic Ocean, especially in winter, making this location a suitable natural laboratory for investigating the impact of precipitation on aerosol particles along air mass trajectories. We take advantage of observational data collected at Bermuda to seasonally assess the sensitivity of aerosol mass concentrations and volume size distributions to accumulated precipitation along trajectories (APT). The mass concentration of particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 μm normalized by the enhancement of carbon monoxide above background (PM(2.5)/ΔCO) at Bermuda was used to estimate the degree of aerosol loss during transport to Bermuda. Results for December–February (DJF) show that most trajectories come from North America and have the highest APTs, resulting in a significant reduction (by 53 %) in PM(2.5)/ΔCO under high-APT conditions (> 13.5 mm) relative to low-APT conditions (< 0.9 mm). Moreover, PM(2.5)/ΔCO was most sensitive to increases in APT up to 5 mm (−0.044 μg m(−3) ppbv(−1) mm(−1)) and less sensitive to increases in APT over 5 mm. While anthropogenic PM(2.5) constituents (e.g., black carbon, sulfate, organic carbon) decrease with high APT, sea salt, in contrast, was comparable between high- and low-APT conditions owing to enhanced local wind and sea salt emissions in high-APT conditions. The greater sensitivity of the fine-mode volume concentrations (versus coarse mode) to wet scavenging is evident from AErosol RObotic NETwork (AERONET) volume size distribution data. A combination of GEOS-Chem model simulations of the (210)Pb submicron aerosol tracer and its gaseous precursor (222)Rn reveals that (i) surface aerosol particles at Bermuda are most impacted by wet scavenging in winter and spring (due to large-scale precipitation) with a maximum in March, whereas convective scavenging plays a substantial role in summer; and (ii) North American (222)Rn tracer emissions contribute most to surface (210)Pb concentrations at Bermuda in winter (~75 %–80 %), indicating that air masses arriving at Bermuda experience large-scale precipitation scavenging while traveling from North America. A case study flight from the ACTIVATE field campaign on 22 February 2020 reveals a significant reduction in aerosol number and volume concentrations during air mass transport off the US East Coast associated with increased cloud fraction and precipitation. These results highlight the sensitivity of remote marine boundary layer aerosol characteristics to precipitation along trajectories, especially when the air mass source is continental outflow from polluted regions like the US East Coast. |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-8609468 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2021 |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-86094682021-11-23 Aerosol responses to precipitation along North American air trajectories arriving at Bermuda Dadashazar, Hossein Alipanah, Majid Hilario, Miguel Ricardo A. Crosbie, Ewan Kirschler, Simon Liu, Hongyu Moore, Richard H. Peters, Andrew J. Scarino, Amy Jo Shook, Michael Thornhill, K. Lee Voigt, Christiane Wang, Hailong Winstead, Edward Zhang, Bo Ziemba, Luke Sorooshian, Armin Atmos Chem Phys Article North American pollution outflow is ubiquitous over the western North Atlantic Ocean, especially in winter, making this location a suitable natural laboratory for investigating the impact of precipitation on aerosol particles along air mass trajectories. We take advantage of observational data collected at Bermuda to seasonally assess the sensitivity of aerosol mass concentrations and volume size distributions to accumulated precipitation along trajectories (APT). The mass concentration of particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter less than 2.5 μm normalized by the enhancement of carbon monoxide above background (PM(2.5)/ΔCO) at Bermuda was used to estimate the degree of aerosol loss during transport to Bermuda. Results for December–February (DJF) show that most trajectories come from North America and have the highest APTs, resulting in a significant reduction (by 53 %) in PM(2.5)/ΔCO under high-APT conditions (> 13.5 mm) relative to low-APT conditions (< 0.9 mm). Moreover, PM(2.5)/ΔCO was most sensitive to increases in APT up to 5 mm (−0.044 μg m(−3) ppbv(−1) mm(−1)) and less sensitive to increases in APT over 5 mm. While anthropogenic PM(2.5) constituents (e.g., black carbon, sulfate, organic carbon) decrease with high APT, sea salt, in contrast, was comparable between high- and low-APT conditions owing to enhanced local wind and sea salt emissions in high-APT conditions. The greater sensitivity of the fine-mode volume concentrations (versus coarse mode) to wet scavenging is evident from AErosol RObotic NETwork (AERONET) volume size distribution data. A combination of GEOS-Chem model simulations of the (210)Pb submicron aerosol tracer and its gaseous precursor (222)Rn reveals that (i) surface aerosol particles at Bermuda are most impacted by wet scavenging in winter and spring (due to large-scale precipitation) with a maximum in March, whereas convective scavenging plays a substantial role in summer; and (ii) North American (222)Rn tracer emissions contribute most to surface (210)Pb concentrations at Bermuda in winter (~75 %–80 %), indicating that air masses arriving at Bermuda experience large-scale precipitation scavenging while traveling from North America. A case study flight from the ACTIVATE field campaign on 22 February 2020 reveals a significant reduction in aerosol number and volume concentrations during air mass transport off the US East Coast associated with increased cloud fraction and precipitation. These results highlight the sensitivity of remote marine boundary layer aerosol characteristics to precipitation along trajectories, especially when the air mass source is continental outflow from polluted regions like the US East Coast. 2021-11-02 /pmc/articles/PMC8609468/ /pubmed/34819950 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-16121-2021 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. |
spellingShingle | Article Dadashazar, Hossein Alipanah, Majid Hilario, Miguel Ricardo A. Crosbie, Ewan Kirschler, Simon Liu, Hongyu Moore, Richard H. Peters, Andrew J. Scarino, Amy Jo Shook, Michael Thornhill, K. Lee Voigt, Christiane Wang, Hailong Winstead, Edward Zhang, Bo Ziemba, Luke Sorooshian, Armin Aerosol responses to precipitation along North American air trajectories arriving at Bermuda |
title | Aerosol responses to precipitation along North American air trajectories arriving at Bermuda |
title_full | Aerosol responses to precipitation along North American air trajectories arriving at Bermuda |
title_fullStr | Aerosol responses to precipitation along North American air trajectories arriving at Bermuda |
title_full_unstemmed | Aerosol responses to precipitation along North American air trajectories arriving at Bermuda |
title_short | Aerosol responses to precipitation along North American air trajectories arriving at Bermuda |
title_sort | aerosol responses to precipitation along north american air trajectories arriving at bermuda |
topic | Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8609468/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34819950 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-16121-2021 |
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