Large contribution of coarse mode to aerosol microphysical and optical properties: Evidence from ground-based observations of a transpacific dust outbreak at a high-elevation north American site

  • E. Kassianov
  • , M. Pekour
  • , C. Flynn
  • , L. K. Berg
  • , J. Beranek
  • , A. Zelenyuk
  • , C. Zhao
  • , L. R. Leung
  • , P. L. Ma
  • , L. Riihimaki
  • , J. D. Fast
  • , J. Barnard
  • , A. G. Hallar
  • , I. B. McCubbin
  • , E. W. Eloranta
  • , A. McComiskey
  • , P. J. Rasch

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

This work is motivated by previous studies of transatlantic transport of Saharan dust and the observed quasi-static nature of coarse mode aerosol with a volume median diameter (VMD) of approximately 3.5 μm. The authors examine coarse mode contributions from transpacific transport of dust to North American aerosol properties using a dataset collected at the high-elevation Storm Peak Laboratory (SPL) and the nearby Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Mobile Facility. Collected ground-based data are complemented by quasi-global model simulations and satellite and ground-based observations. The authors identify a major dust event associated mostly with a transpacific plume (about 65% of near-surface aerosol mass) in which the coarse mode with moderate (~3 μm) VMD is distinct and contributes substantially to total aerosol volume (up to 70%) and scattering (up to 40%). The results demonstrate that the identified plume at the SPL site has a considerable fraction of supermicron particles (VMD ~3 μm) and, thus, suggest that these particles have a fairly invariant behavior despite transpacific transport. If confirmed in additional studies, this invariant behavior may simplify considerably parameterizations for size-dependent processes associated with dust transport and removal.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1431-1443
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences
Volume74
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 1 2017

Keywords

  • Dust or dust storms
  • In situ atmospheric observations
  • Lidars/Lidar observations
  • Optical phenomena
  • Precipitation
  • Surface observations

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