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Single Particle Analysis of Aerosols, Observed in the Marine Boundary Layer during the Monterey Area Ship Tracks Experiment (MAST), with Respect to Cloud Droplet Formation
Authors:L A De Bock  P E Joos  K J Noone  R A Pockalny  R E Van Grieken
Institution:(1) Department of Chemistry, University of Antwerp (UIA), B-2610 Antwerp, Belgium;(2) Department of Meteorology, Stockholm University, S-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden;(3) Graduate School of Oceanography, University of Rhode Island, Narragansett, RI, 02882, U.S.A.
Abstract:The chemical composition of individual particles >0.2 mgrm sampled duringthe MAST-experiment wereanalysed by SEM-EDX, in combination with multivariatetechniques. The objective of this experiment was toidentify the mechanisms responsible for themodification of marine stratocumulus clouds byemissions from ships and in a wider sense to provideinformation on the global processes involved inatmospheric modification of cloud albedo. Aerosolswere examined under different MBL pollution levels(clean, intermediately polluted and moderatelypolluted) in five different reservoirs: backgroundbelow-cloud and above-cloud aerosol; background clouddroplet residual particles; below-cloud ship plumeaerosol and ship track cloud droplet residualparticles.In this study a relation was provided between theaerosol emitted from the ship's stack to an effect incloud. Additionally, a large fraction of the ambientaerosol was found to be composed of organic materialor other compounds, consisting of low Z-elements,associated with chlorine. Their number fraction waslargest in clean marine boundary layers, and decreasedwith increasing pollution levels. The fraction of`transformed sea salt' (Na, Cl, S), on the other hand,increased with the pollution level in the MBL. Only20% of the particles fell within the detectable rangeof the analysis.
Keywords:aerosols  cloud formation  microanalysis  ship tracks  climate change
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