野火烟雾对北极卷云形成的影响,第 1 部分:MOSAiC 2019-2020 年观测分析

IF 5.2 1区 地球科学 Q1 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
Albert Ansmann, Cristofer Jimenez, Johanna Roschke, Johannes Bühl, Kevin Ohneiser, Ronny Engelmann, Martin Radenz, Hannes Griesche, Julian Hofer, Dietrich Althausen, Daniel A. Knopf, Sandro Dahlke, Tom Gaudek, Patric Seifert, Ulla Wandinger
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要在过去几年中,北纬中高纬度地区每个火灾季节对流层上层的野火烟雾层数量有所增加。为了在天气和气候模式中适当考虑烟雾,需要详细探讨烟雾对各种大气过程的影响。在本研究中,我们重点关注野火烟雾对卷云形成的潜在影响。在两篇系列文章的第一部分中,我们首次将利用激光雷达和雷达进行的最先进的气溶胶和卷云观测与第二部分中卷云演变过程中重力波诱导冰核形成的综合建模紧密联系起来。这项复杂的研究以为期一年的北极气候研究多学科漂流观测站(MOSAiC)考察期间在北极中部进行的气溶胶和冰云观测为基础。在将近一年的时间里(从 2019 年夏季到 2020 年春季),西伯利亚野火的高龄烟雾污染了北极中部上空的对流层顶区域,许多卷云系统在受污染的对流层上部形成。数据分析(第 1 部分)的目标是提供观测证据,证明老化野火烟雾(有机气溶胶颗粒)对 2019-2020 年冬半年期间北极中部(MOSAiC 研究破冰船 Polarstern 上空)卷云形成的主要影响。第 2 部分模拟的目的是通过观测气溶胶和气象条件(温度、相对湿度),并考虑现实重力波特征(上升气流速度、波幅),更深入、更详细地了解烟雾对冰核形成的潜在影响。气团的垂直运动对于云的形成至关重要。第 1 部分介绍的测量是在冬半年(10 月至次年 3 月)在 Polarstern 号破冰船上进行的。在这半年的冬季,Polarstern 号科考船主要在北纬 85 度的北极中部随冰群漂流。卷云统计数据显示了同步卷云类冰云的典型特性(卷云结构自上而下生成)。冰云大多在接近对流层顶的高度开始演变。卷云顶部温度累积在 -60 至 -75 °C 之间。冰云的卷云光学厚度(532 纳米波长的 COT)范围很广,从 0.03(亚可见卷云部分,占所有案例的 25%)到 0.03-0.3(可见薄卷云,占 40%)再到 0.3(不透明卷云部分,占 35%)。在所有高空激光雷达观测中,约有 30% 发现了卷云特征,远远超过预期(10%)。这一事实首次表明,野火烟雾在很大程度上参与了北极卷云的形成。对流层顶附近的烟雾颗粒表面积浓度约为 5-15 µm2 cm-3,表明对流层上部的气溶胶污染水平大大提高。根据激光雷达和雷达的联合测量结果,我们从冰水含量(IWC)、冰晶数量浓度(ICNC)和可见光消光系数的剖面分析了 20 个卷云案例。冰水含量大多在 0.001-0.01 克/米-3 之间,冰晶数浓度(在冰裂隙中)累积在 0.01-10 升-1 之间。三个事实(结合在一起)证实了我们的假设,即老化的野火烟雾引发了许多观测到的卷云系统中冰的形成:(1)低 ICNC 值指向异质冰核形成,(2)烟雾污染水平的升高(就颗粒表面积浓度而言)足以显著影响对流层上部的冰核形成,以及(3)高冰饱和度比在 1.3-1.4 左右累积。3-1.4 左右的高冰饱和度,这表明在有机气溶胶颗粒(野火烟雾颗粒)的情况下,INPs 的效率非常低。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Impact of wildfire smoke on Arctic cirrus formation, part 1: analysis of MOSAiC 2019–2020 observations
Abstract. The number of wildfire smoke layers in the upper troposphere per fire season increased at mid and high northern latitudes during the last years. To consider smoke in weather and climate models appropriately, the influence of smoke on a variety of atmospheric processes needs to be explored in detail. In this study, we focus on the potential impact of wildfire smoke on cirrus formation. For the first time, state-of-the-art aerosol and cirrus observations with lidar and radar, presented in part 1 of a series of two articles, are closely linked to comprehensive modeling of gravity-wave-induced ice nucleation in cirrus evolution processes, presented in part 2. The complex study is based on aerosol and ice cloud observations in the central Arctic during the one-year MOSAiC (Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate) expedition. For almost a year (from the summer of 2019 to the spring of 2020), aged Siberian wildfire smoke polluted the tropopause region over the central Arctic and many cirrus systems developed in the polluted upper troposphere. Goal of the data analysis (part 1) is to provide observational evidence for a dominating impact of aged wildfire smoke (organic aerosol particles) on cirrus formation in the central Arctic (over the MOSAiC research icebreaker Polarstern) during the winter half year of 2019–2020. Aim of the simulations in part 2 is to gain a deeper and more detailed insight into the potential smoke impact on ice nucleation as a function of observed aerosol and meteorological conditions (temperature, relative humidity) and by considering realistic gravity wave characteristics (updraft speed, wave amplitude). Vertical movements of air parcels are essential to initiate cloud formation. The measurements presented in part 1 were conducted during the winter half year (October to March), aboard the ice breaker Polarstern. The research vessel Polarstern drifted with the pack ice in the central Arctic mainly at latitudes >85 °N during the winter half year. The cirrus statistics show typical properties of ice clouds of the synoptic cirrus category (top-down generation of cirrus structures). The ice clouds mostly started to evolve at heights close to the tropopause. Cirrus top temperatures accumulated between −60 and −75 °C. The cirrus optical thickness (COT at 532 nm) of the ice clouds covered a wide range of values from < 0.03 (subvisible cirrus fraction, 25 % out of all cases) over 0.03–0.3 (visible thin cirrus, 40 %) to > 0.3 (opaque cirrus fraction, 35 %). In about 30 % out of all high altitude lidar observations, cirrus signatures were detected, much more than expected (10 %). This fact may be taken as a first hint that wildfire smoke was significantly involved in Arctic cirrus formation. The smoke particle surface area concentration around the tropopause was of the order of 5–15 µm2 cm−3 and indicated considerably enhanced levels of aerosol pollution in the upper troposphere. Based on the combined lidar-radar measurements, we analyzed 20 cirrus cases in terms of profiles of the ice water content (IWC), ice crystal number concentration (ICNC), and visible extinction coefficient. IWC mostly ranged from 0.001–0.01 g/m−3 and ICNC (in the ice virga) accumulated in the range from 0.01 to 10 L−1. Three facts (in combination) corroborate our hypothesis that aged wildfire smoke triggered ice formation in many of the observed cirrus systems: (1) The low ICNC values point to heterogeneous ice nucleation, (2) the elevated smoke pollution levels (in terms of particle surface area concentrations) were high enough to significantly influence ice nucleation in the upper troposphere, and (3) the high ice saturation ratios accumulating around 1.3–1.4 in the upper part of the observed and analyzed cirrus decks indicate quite inefficient INPs as expected in the case of organic aerosol particles (wild fire smoke particles).
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来源期刊
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 地学-气象与大气科学
CiteScore
10.70
自引率
20.60%
发文量
702
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (ACP) is a not-for-profit international scientific journal dedicated to the publication and public discussion of high-quality studies investigating the Earth''s atmosphere and the underlying chemical and physical processes. It covers the altitude range from the land and ocean surface up to the turbopause, including the troposphere, stratosphere, and mesosphere. The main subject areas comprise atmospheric modelling, field measurements, remote sensing, and laboratory studies of gases, aerosols, clouds and precipitation, isotopes, radiation, dynamics, biosphere interactions, and hydrosphere interactions. The journal scope is focused on studies with general implications for atmospheric science rather than investigations that are primarily of local or technical interest.
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