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ACE-ASIA - Regional climatic and atmospheric chemical effects of Asian dust and pollution

Authors :
Piotr J. Flatau
William C. Conant
Itsushi Uno
Krzysztof M. Markowicz
Philip B. Russell
Sarah J. Doherty
Yohei Shinozuka
Atsushi Shimizu
Jung-Hun Woo
Rodney J. Weber
Fred J. Brechtel
Xiao Y. Zhang
Lynn M. Russell
Richard Arimoto
Jiyoung Kim
John H. Seinfeld
Gregory R. Carmichael
Barry J. Huebert
Timothy S. Bates
Chul H. Song
Thomas A. Cahill
Youhua Tang
Andrew M. Vogelmann
Patricia K. Quinn
Antony D. Clarke
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
American Meteorological Society, 2004.

Abstract

Although continental-scale plumes of Asian dust and pollution reduce the amount of solar radiation reaching the earth's surface and perturb the chemistry of the atmosphere, our ability to quantify these effects has been limited by a lack of critical observations, particularly of layers above the surface. Comprehensive surface, airborne, shipboard, and satellite measurements of Asian aerosol chemical composition, size, optical properties, and radiative impacts were performed during the Asian Pacific Regional Aerosol Characterization Experiment (ACE-Asia) study. Measurements within a massive Chinese dust storm at numerous widely spaced sampling locations revealed the highly complex structure of the atmosphere, in which layers of dust, urban pollution, and biomass-burning smoke may be transported long distances as distinct entities or mixed together. The data allow a first-time assessment of the regional climatic and atmospheric chemical effects of a continental-scale mixture of dust and pollution. Our results show that radiative flux reductions during such episodes are sufficient to cause regional climate change.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8553831dc3e9896fb28beebcdbcaf047