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Atmospheric Concentrations and Sources of Black Carbon Over Tropical Australian Waters

Authors :
Changda Wu
Haydn Trounce
Erin Dunne
David W.T. Griffith
Scott D. Chambers
Alastair G. Williams
Ruhi S. Humphries
Luke T. Cravigan
Branka Miljevic
Chunlin Zhang
Hao Wang
Boguang Wang
Zoran Ristovski
Source :
SSRN Electronic Journal.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Black carbon (BC) aerosols significantly contribute to radiative budgets globally, however their actual contributions remain poorly constrained in many under-sampled ocean regions. The tropical waters north of Australia are a part of the Indo-Pacific warm pool, regarded as a heat engine of global climate, and are in proximity to large terrestrial sources of BC aerosols such as fossil fuel emissions, and biomass burning emissions from northern Australia. Despite this, measurements of marine aerosols, especially BC remain elusive, leading to large uncertainties and discrepancies in current chemistry-climate models for this region. Here, we report the first comprehensive measurements of aerosol properties collected over the tropical warm pool in Australian waters during a voyage in late 2019. The non-marine related aerosol emissions observed in the Arafura Sea region were more intense than in the Timor Sea marine region, as the Arafura Sea was subject to greater continental outflows. The median equivalent BC (eBC) concentration in the Arafura Sea (0.66 μg m

Details

ISSN :
15565068
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SSRN Electronic Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....238e5625213b2c0d7799ba16293247fc