Sea-salt aerosol forecasts compared with daily measurements at the island of Lampedusa (Central Mediterranean)

2011 ◽  
Vol 100 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Kishcha ◽  
S. Nickovic ◽  
B. Starobinets ◽  
A. di Sarra ◽  
R. Udisti ◽  
...  
2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Kishcha ◽  
B. Starobinets ◽  
R. Udisti ◽  
S. Becagli ◽  
A. di Sarra ◽  
...  

Sea-salt aerosol (SSA) is the dominant contributor to cloud condensation nuclei over ocean areas, where wind speed is significant. Thereby, SSA could affect cloud formation and play an important role in the Earth weather and climate. Rainfall could produce large impact on SSA concentration due to wet removal processes. An analysis of changes in sea-salt aerosol concentration after rainfall is essential for a deeper understanding of the process of SSA loading in the boundary layer. The current experimental study focused on analyzing time variations of SSA mass concentration after rainfall, on the basis of long-term daily SSA measurements during the three-year period 2006–2008, at the tiny Mediterranean island of Lampedusa (Central Mediterranean). To study the effect of rainfall on SSA time variations, we used the superposed epoch method. We applied this approach to differing rainfall events related to different months and atmospheric/sea conditions. Integrated processing was applied to SSA concentration anomalies, in order to filter out random variability. Observational evidence of SSA mass concentration oscillations after rainfall with a maximum on the 2nd day and a minimum on the 4th day was obtained. The knowledge of SSA variations after rainfall is important for validating rainout parameterization in existing sea-salt aerosol and climate models.


2015 ◽  
Vol 101 ◽  
pp. 41-48 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Spada ◽  
O. Jorba ◽  
C. Pérez García-Pando ◽  
Z. Janjic ◽  
J.M. Baldasano
Keyword(s):  
Sea Salt ◽  

1998 ◽  
Vol 26 ◽  
pp. 156-160 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Hodgkins ◽  
Martyn Tranter

The chemical composition of snow and meltwater in the 13 km2 catchment of Scott Turnerbreen, Svalbard, was investigated during the spring and summer of 1993. This paper assesses the provenance of solute in the snowpack and its impact on runoff chemistry. Dry snow contains 420μeql-1 of solute, is slightly acidic (pH 5.4) and is dominated by Na+ and Cl-. Wet snow is more dilute (total concentration 340μeql-1), and less acidic (pH 5.9). This is consistent with the elution of ions from the snowpack by meltwater. Snowpack solute can be partitioned into the following fractions: sea-salt aerosol, acid aerosol and crustal. About 98% of snowpack solute is sea salt, yielding 22000 kg km-2a-1. The behaviour of snowpack-derived Cl- in runoff is distinctive, peaking at over 800 μeql-1 early in the melt season as runoff picks up, before declining quasi-exponentially. This represents the discharge of snowmelt concentrated by elution within the snowpack which subsequently becomes relatively dilute. A solute yield of 140 kg km-2 a-1 can be attributed to anthropogenically generated acid aerosols, representing long-range atmospheric transport of pollutants, a potential contributor to Arctic runoff acidification.


1992 ◽  
Vol 02 (04) ◽  
pp. 593-601 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sha Yin ◽  
Liu Pingsheng ◽  
Hu Zhaohui ◽  
Zhong Ming ◽  
Yang Shaojin ◽  
...  

Proton Induced X-ray Emission (PIXE) and Instrumental Neutron Activation Analysis (INAA) techniques were used to measure the contents of 45 elements in 150 air-filter samples collected by cascade impactor with 8 stages at 10 sites in Beijing-Tianjin area of China during the periods of the winter of 1983 and the summer of 1984. It was noticed that the toxic elements such as As, Sb, Se, Pb, Hg, Cu and Ni were mainly enriched in fine particles with diameter less than 2 um. The major seven sources of coal burning, soil dust, oi1 burning, sea-salt aerosol, motor vehicle emission, limestone dust and industrial refuse attributing to the pollution in Tianjin area were identified by Chemical Elements Balance method (CEB). Among them the most important sources were the soil dust and the emission from coal-combustion followed by contributions from limestone and industrial refuse.


1981 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 303-317
Author(s):  
J. L. Bravo ◽  
S. Salazar ◽  
A. Muhlia

Durante los meses de enero a marzo y de mayo a Julio de 1979 se realizó muestreo de aerosol atmosférico a bordo de los buques mexicanos de investigación "Mariano Matamoros" y "DM 20" en el Océano Pacífico (7° N, 84° W) y Océano Atlántico (7°30’N, 42°30’ W) respectivamente. Las componentes determinadas fueron: minerales y sales de mar. En el Océano Atlántico la media geométrica de la concentración de minerales fue de 7.27 µg/m3 y la de sales de mar 21.38 µg/m3. En el Océano Pacífico las concentraciones de estas componentes fueron 0.62 y 6.28 µg/m3, respectivamente; en esta región son los primeros estudios que se desarrollan sobre aerosol mineral y sales de mar. En el análisis estadístico de estas dos componentes se utilizó el criterio de la x2 para la minimización del error. Para el Océano Atlántico se obtuvieron distribuciones log-normal bimodales; para el Pacífico distribuciones log-normales sencillas, lo cual estadísticamente indica la presencia de dos y un conjunto de fenómenos, respectivamente. Las concentraciones reportadas en el presente estudio para el Océano Atlántico están de acuerdo con las de otros autores. Las del Océano Pacífico son más altas que las reportadas en otras áreas de este océano.


2003 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 2963-3050 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Sander ◽  
W. C. Keene ◽  
A. A. P. Pszenny ◽  
R. Arimoto ◽  
G. P. Ayers ◽  
...  

Abstract. The cycling of inorganic bromine in the marine boundary layer (mbl) has received increased attention in recent years. Bromide, a constituent of sea water, is injected into the atmosphere in association with sea-salt aerosol by breaking waves on the ocean surface. Measurements reveal that supermicrometer sea-salt aerosol is depleted in bromine by about 50% relative to conservative tracers, whereas marine submicrometer aerosol is often enriched in bromine. Model calculations, laboratory studies, and field observations strongly suggest that these depletions reflect the chemical transformation of particulate bromide to reactive inorganic gases that influence the processing of ozone and other important constituents of marine air. However, currently available techniques cannot reliably quantify many \\chem{Br}-containing compounds at ambient concentrations and, consequently, our understanding of inorganic Br cycling over the oceans and its global significance are uncertain. To provide a more coherent framework for future research, we have reviewed measurements in marine aerosol, the gas phase, and in rain. We also summarize sources and sinks, as well as model and laboratory studies of chemical transformations. The focus is on inorganic bromine over the open oceans, excluding the polar regions. The generation of sea-salt aerosol at the ocean surface is the major tropospheric source producing about 6.2 Tg/a of bromide. The transport of  Br from continents (as mineral aerosol, and as products from biomass-burning and fossil-fuel combustion) can be of local importance. Transport of degradation products of long-lived Br-containing compounds from the stratosphere and other sources contribute lesser amounts. Available evidence suggests that, following aerosol acidification, sea-salt bromide reacts to form Br2 and BrCl that volatilize to the gas phase and photolyze in daylight to produce atomic Br and Cl. Subsequent transformations can destroy tropospheric ozone, oxidize dimethylsulfide (DMS) and hydrocarbons in the gas phase and S(IV) in aerosol solutions, and thereby potentially influence climate. The diurnal cycle of gas-phase \\Br and the corresponding particulate Br deficits are correlated. Higher values of Br in the gas phase during daytime are consistent with expectations based on photochemistry. Mechanisms that explain the widely reported accumulation of particulate Br in submicrometer aerosols are not yet understood. We expect that the importance of inorganic Br cycling will vary in the future as a function of both increasing acidification of the atmosphere (through anthropogenic emissions) and climate changes. The latter affects bromine cycling via meteorological factors including global wind fields (and the associated production of sea-salt aerosol), temperature, and relative humidity.


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