Authors
Charles A Brock, Julie Cozic, Roya Bahreini, Karl D Froyd, Ann M Middlebrook, A McComiskey, Jerome Brioude, OR Cooper, Andreas Stohl, KC Aikin, JA De Gouw, DW Fahey, RA Ferrare, R-S Gao, W Gore, JS Holloway, G Hübler, A Jefferson, DA Lack, S Lance, RH Moore, DM Murphy, Athanasios Nenes, PC Novelli, JB Nowak, JA Ogren, J Peischl, RB Pierce, P Pilewskie, PK Quinn, TB Ryerson, KS Schmidt, JP Schwarz, Harald Sodemann, JR Spackman, H Stark, DS Thomson, T Thornberry, P Veres, LA Watts, C Warneke, AG Wollny
Publication date
2011/3/16
Journal
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Volume
11
Issue
6
Pages
2423-2453
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Description
We present an overview of the background, scientific goals, and execution of the Aerosol, Radiation, and Cloud Processes affecting Arctic Climate (ARCPAC) project of April 2008. We then summarize airborne measurements, made in the troposphere of the Alaskan Arctic, of aerosol particle size distributions, composition, and optical properties and discuss the sources and transport of the aerosols. The aerosol data were grouped into four categories based on gas-phase composition. First, the background troposphere contained a relatively diffuse, sulfate-rich aerosol extending from the top of the sea-ice inversion layer to 7.4 km altitude. Second, a region of depleted (relative to the background) aerosol was present within the surface inversion layer over sea-ice. Third, layers of dense, organic-rich smoke from open biomass fires in southern Russia and southeastern Siberia were frequently encountered at all altitudes from the top of the inversion layer to 7.1 km. Finally, some aerosol layers were dominated by components originating from fossil fuel combustion.

Of these four categories measured during ARCPAC, the diffuse background aerosol was most similar to the average springtime aerosol properties observed at a long-term monitoring site at Barrow, Alaska. The biomass burning (BB) and fossil fuel layers were present above the sea-ice inversion layer and did not reach the sea-ice surface during the course of the ARCPAC measurements. The BB aerosol layers were highly scattering and were moderately hygroscopic. On average, the layers produced a noontime net heating of ~0.1 K day−1 between 3 and 7 km and a slight cooling at the …

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