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Biomass burning events measured by lidars in EARLINET – Part 2: Optical properties investigation

Authors :
Christina-Anna Papanikolaou
Maria Mylonaki
Zahary Y. Peshev
Holger Baars
Daniele Bortoli
Doina Nicolae
Mariana Adam
Kalliopi Artemis Voudouri
Iwona S. Stachlewska
Nikolaos Papagiannopoulos
Ina Mattis
Lucja Janicka
Luca Alados-Arboledas
Juan Antonio Bravo-Aranda
Aleksander Pietruczuk
Dominika Szczepanik
Lucia Mona
Livio Belegante
Constantino Muñoz-Porcar
Anatoli Chaikovsky
Arnoud Apituley
Ivan Grigorov
Nikolaos Siomos
Michaël Sicard
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

Biomass burning episodes measured at 14 stations of the European Aerosol Research Lidar Network (EARLINET) over 2008–2017 were analysed using the methodology described in "Biomass burning events measured by lidars in EARLINET – Part 1: Data analysis methodology" (Adam et al., 2020, this issue). The smoke layers were identified in lidar optical properties profiles. A number of 795 layers for which we measured at least one intensive parameter was analysed. These layers were geographically distributed as follows: 399 layers observed in South-East Europe, 119 layers observed in South-West Europe, 243 layers observed in North-East Europe, and 34 layers observed in Central Europe. The mean layer intensive parameters are discussed following two research directions: (I) the long-range transport of smoke particles from North America, and (II) the smoke properties (fresh versus aged), separating the smoke events into four continental source regions (European, North American, African, Asian or a mixture of two), based on back trajectory analysis. The smoke detected in Central Europe (Cabauw, Leipzig, and Hohenpeißenberg) was mostly transported from North America (87 % of fires). In North-East Europe (Belsk, Minsk, Warsaw) smoke advected mostly from Eastern Europe (Ukraine and Russia), but there was a significant contribution (31 %) from North America. In South-West Europe (Barcelona, Evora, Granada) smoke originated mainly from the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa (while 9 % were originating in North America). In the South-East Europe (Athens, Bucharest, Potenza, Sofia, Thessaloniki) the origin of the smoke was mostly local (only 3 % represented North America smoke). The following features, correlated with the increased smoke travel time (corresponding to aging) were found: the colour ratio of the lidar ratio (i.e., the ratio of the lidar ratio at 532 nm to the lidar ratio at 355 nm) and the colour ratio of the backscatter Ångström exponent (i.e., the ratio of the backscatter-related Angstrom exponent for the pair 532 nm – 1064 nm to the one for the pair 355 nm – 532 nm) increase, while the extinction Ångström exponent and the colour ratio of the particle depolarization ratio (i.e., the ratio of the particle linear depolarization ratio at 532 nm to the particle depolarization ratio at 355 nm) decrease. The smoke originating from all continental regions can be characterized on average as aged smoke, with a very few exceptions. In general, the long range transported smoke shows higher lidar ratio and lower depolarization ratio compared to the local smoke.

Details

ISSN :
16807324
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....415591d53cdecd07737a3f6e5f0a47ee