Sources of springtime surface black carbon in the Arctic: an adjoint analysis for April 2008
We quantify source contributions to springtime (April 2008) surface black carbon (BC) in the Arctic by interpreting surface observations of BC at five receptor sites (Denali, Barrow, Alert, Zeppelin, and Summit) using a global chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem) and its adjoint. Contributions to...
Main Authors: | , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2017-08-01
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Series: | Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics |
Online Access: | https://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/17/9697/2017/acp-17-9697-2017.pdf |
Summary: | We quantify source contributions to springtime (April 2008) surface black
carbon (BC) in the Arctic by interpreting surface observations of BC at five
receptor sites (Denali, Barrow, Alert, Zeppelin, and Summit) using a global
chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem) and its adjoint. Contributions to BC at
Barrow, Alert, and Zeppelin are dominated by Asian anthropogenic sources
(40–43 %) before 18 April and by Siberian open biomass burning emissions
(29–41 %) afterward. In contrast, Summit, a mostly free tropospheric
site, has predominantly an Asian anthropogenic source contribution
(24–68 %, with an average of 45 %). We compute the adjoint
sensitivity of BC concentrations at the five sites during a pollution episode
(20–25 April) to global emissions from 1 March to 25 April. The associated
contributions are the combined results of these sensitivities and BC
emissions. Local and regional anthropogenic sources in Alaska are the largest
anthropogenic sources of BC at Denali (63 % of total anthropogenic
contributions), and natural gas flaring emissions in the western extreme
north of Russia (WENR) are the largest anthropogenic sources of BC at
Zeppelin (26 %) and Alert (13 %). We find that long-range transport
of emissions from Beijing–Tianjin–Hebei (also known as Jing–Jin–Ji), the
biggest urbanized region in northern China, contribute significantly
(∼ 10 %)</span> to surface
BC across the Arctic. On average, it takes ∼ 12 days for Asian
anthropogenic emissions and Siberian biomass burning
emissions to reach the Arctic lower troposphere, supporting earlier studies.
Natural gas flaring emissions from the WENR reach Zeppelin in about a week.
We find that episodic transport events dominate BC at Denali (87 %), a site
outside the Arctic front, which is a strong transport barrier. The relative
contribution of these events to surface BC within the polar dome is much
smaller (∼ 50 % at Barrow and Zeppelin and ∼ 10 % at Alert).
The large contributions from Asian anthropogenic sources
are predominately in the form of <q>chronic</q> pollution (∼ 40 %
at Barrow, 65 % at Alert, and 57 % at Zeppelin) on about a 1-month
timescale. As such, it is likely that previous studies using 5- or 10-day
trajectory analyses strongly underestimated the contribution from Asia to
surface BC in the Arctic. |
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ISSN: | 1680-7316 1680-7324 |