Back to Search Start Over

A global analysis of climate-relevant aerosol properties retrieved from the network of GAW near-surface observatories

Authors :
Olivier Favez
Jean-Marc Pichon
Sébastien Conil
Frank Meinhardt
David Picard
Mar Sorribas
Prodromos Fetfatzis
Kay Weinhold
Angela Marinoni
John A. Ogren
Pasi Aalto
Elisabeth Andrews
Andrés Alastuey
Krista Luoma
Jeong Eun Kim
Nhat Anh Nguyen
Sang Woo Kim
Erik Ahlberg
Jesús Yus-Díez
Eija Asmi
Radovan Krejci
Ville Vakkari
Clémence Rose
Jean-Phillipe Putaud
Marco Pandolfi
Olga L. Mayol-Bracero
Nicolas Bukowiecki
Peter Tunved
Andreas Schwerin
Cathrine Lund Myhre
Patrick J. Sheridan
Jean-Marc Metzger
Anne Kasper-Giebl
Ivo Kalapov
P. Villani
Noemí Pérez
Alfred Wiedensohler
Margarita Yela
Benjamin T. Brem
Giorgos Kouvarakis
Alessandro Bigi
James P. Sherman
Natalia Prats
Hae-Jung Lee
Casper Labuschagne
Markku Kulmala
Junying Sun
Jean-Eudes Petit
András Hoffer
Thomas Tuch
Lucas Alados Arboledas
Pierre Tulet
Antti Hyvärinen
Véronique Pont
Nikos Kalivitis
Johan P. Beukes
Jonas Gliß
Todor Arsov
Sebastiao Martins Dos Santos
S. Vratolis
Fernando Velarde
Martine Collaud Coen
G. Löschau
Sangeeta Sharma
Martin Gysel-Beer
Tuukka Petäjä
Karine Sellegri
Marcos Andrade
Markus Fiebig
Lorenzo Labrador
Urs Baltensperger
Paul Zieger
Susanne Bastian
Maik Schütze
Neng Huei Lin
Nikolaos Mihalopoulos
Nadezda Zikova
Wan Dayantolis
Anna Degorska
Maik Merkel
Gloria Titos
Jenny L. Hand
Gannet A. Hallar
Harald Flentje
Olaf Bath
Fabienne Reisen
Martin Steinbacher
Gerhard Schauer
Maria Rita Perrone
Maria I. Gini
Ralf Sohmer
Salvatore Romano
Augustin Mortier
Asta Gregorič
Anthony J. Prenni
Cedric Couret
Sheng Hsiang Wang
V. Zdimal
Heikki Lihavainen
John Backman
Barbara Tokzko
Patricio Velasquez
Wenche Aas
Irena Kranjc
Konstantinos Eleftheriadis
Stina Ausmeel
Begoña Artíñano
Rolf Weller
Michael Schultz
Derek E. Day
Paolo Laj
Jakub Ondráček
Rakesh K. Hooda
Melita Keywood
Christoph Hueglin
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Aerosol particles are essential constituents of the Earth’s atmosphere, impacting the earth radiation balance directly by scattering and absorbing solar radiation, and indirectly by acting as cloud condensation nuclei. In contrast to most greenhouse gases, aerosol particles have short atmospheric residence time resulting in a highly heterogeneous distribution in space and time. There is a clear need to document this variability at regional scale through observations involving, in particular, the in-situ near-surface segment of the atmospheric observations system. This paper will provide the widest effort so far to document variability of climate-relevant in-situ aerosol properties (namely wavelength dependent particle light scattering and absorption coefficients, particle number concentration and particle number size distribution) from all sites connected to the Global Atmosphere Watch network. High quality data from more than 90 stations worldwide have been collected and controlled for quality and are reported for a reference year in 2017, providing a very extended and robust view of the variability of these variables worldwide. The range of variability observed worldwide for light scattering and absorption coefficients, single scattering albedo and particle number concentration are presented together with preliminary information on their long-term trends and comparison with model simulation for the different stations. The scope of the present paper is also to provide the necessary suite of information including data provision procedures, quality control and analysis, data policy and usage of the ground-based aerosol measurements network. It delivers to users of the World Data Centre on Aerosol, the required confidence in data products in the form of a fully-characterized value chain, including uncertainty estimation and requirements for contributing to the global climate monitoring system.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18678548
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....15ac27aa1516fb0a7d30ffb40c026771