Publikasjonsdetaljer
Tidsskrift: Journal of Geophysical Research (JGR): Atmospheres, vol. 124, 1798â1822, 2019
Arkiv: http://hdl.handle.net/11250/2596908
Doi: doi.org/10.1029/2018JD029802
Sammendrag:
Two years of continuous in situ measurements of Arctic lowâlevel clouds have been made at the Mount Zeppelin Observatory (78°56â˛N, 11°53â˛E), in NyâĂ
lesund, Spitsbergen. The monthly median value of the cloud particle number concentration (Nc) showed a clear seasonal variation: Its maximum appeared in MayâJuly (65 Âą 8 cmâ3), and it remained low between October and March (8 Âą 7 cmâ3). At temperatures warmer than 0 °C, a clear correlation was found between the hourly Nc values and the number concentrations of aerosols with dry diameters larger than 70 nm (N70), which are proxies for cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). When clouds were detected at temperatures colder than 0 °C, some of the data followed the summertime Nc to N70 relationship, while other data showed systematically lower Nc values. The lidarâderived depolarization ratios suggested that the former (CCNâcontrolled) and latter (CCNâuncontrolled) data generally corresponded to clouds consisting of supercooled water droplets and those containing ice particles, respectively. The CCNâcontrolled data persistently appeared throughout the year at Zeppelin. The aerosolâcloud interaction index (ACI = dlnNc/(3dlnN70)) for the CCNâcontrolled data showed high sensitivities to aerosols both in the summer (clean air) and winterâspring (Arctic haze) seasons (0.22 Âą 0.03 and 0.25 Âą 0.02, respectively). The air parcel model calculations generally reproduced these values. The threshold diameters of aerosol activation (Dact), which account for the Nc of the CCNâcontrolled data, were as low as 30â50 nm when N70 was less than 30 cmâ3, suggesting that new particle formation can affect Arctic cloud microphysics.