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A central arctic extreme aerosol event triggered by a warm air-mass intrusion

Authors :
Dada, Lubna
Angot, Hélène
Beck, Ivo
Baccarini, Andrea
Quéléver, Lauriane L. J.
Boyer, Matthew
Laurila, Tiia
Brasseur, Zoé
Jozef, Gina
de Boer, Gijs
Shupe, Matthew D.
Henning, Silvia
Bucci, Silvia
Dütsch, Marina
Stohl, Andreas
Petäjä, Tuukka
Daellenbach, Kaspar R.
Jokinen, Tuija
Schmale, Julia
Polar and arctic atmospheric research (PANDA)
Institute for Atmospheric and Earth System Research (INAR)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Warm and moist air-mass intrusions into the Arctic are more frequent than the past decades. Here, the authors show that warm air mass intrusions from northern Eurasia inject record amounts of aerosols into the central Arctic Ocean strongly impacting atmospheric chemistry and cloud properties. Frequency and intensity of warm and moist air-mass intrusions into the Arctic have increased over the past decades and have been related to sea ice melt. During our year-long expedition in the remote central Arctic Ocean, a record-breaking increase in temperature, moisture and downwelling-longwave radiation was observed in mid-April 2020, during an air-mass intrusion carrying air pollutants from northern Eurasia. The two-day intrusion, caused drastic changes in the aerosol size distribution, chemical composition and particle hygroscopicity. Here we show how the intrusion transformed the Arctic from a remote low-particle environment to an area comparable to a central-European urban setting. Additionally, the intrusion resulted in an explosive increase in cloud condensation nuclei, which can have direct effects on Arctic clouds' radiation, their precipitation patterns, and their lifetime. Thus, unless prompt actions to significantly reduce emissions in the source regions are taken, such intrusion events are expected to continue to affect the Arctic climate.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..fa1a44f4ad05f359ecb8c523401f6c03