Xiang-Yu Li

and 28 more

Process modeling of aerosol-cloud interaction is essential to bridging gaps between observational analysis and climate modeling of aerosol effects in the Earth system and eventually reducing climate projection uncertainties. In this study, we examine aerosol-cloud interaction in summertime precipitating shallow cumuli observed during the Aerosol Cloud meTeorology Interactions oVer the western ATlantic Experiment (ACTIVATE). Aerosols and precipitating shallow cumuli were extensively observed with in-situ and remote-sensing instruments during two research flight cases on 02 June and 07 June, respectively, during the ACTIVATE summer 2021 deployment phase. We perform observational analysis and large-eddy simulation (LES) of aerosol effect on precipitating cumulus in these two cases. Given the measured aerosol size distributions and meteorological conditions, LES is able to reproduce the observed cloud properties by aircraft such as liquid water content (LWC), cloud droplet number concentration (Nc) and effective radius reff. However, it produces smaller liquid water path (LWP) and larger Nc compared to the satellite retrievals. Both 02 and 07 June cases are over warm waters of the Gulf Stream and have a cloud top height over 3 km, but the 07 June case is more polluted and has larger LWC. We find that the aerosol-induced LWP adjustment is dominated by precipitation and is anticorrelated with cloud-top entrainment for both cases. A negative cloud fraction adjustment due to an increase of aerosol number concentration is also shown in the simulations.

Joshua DiGangi

and 13 more

Southeast Asian biomass burning is a major pollutant source that contributes to poor air quality throughout the region. Thus, understanding these emissions is critical for predicting and mitigating their health impacts. While many studies have reported ground-based and satellite measurements, airborne measurements at a regional scale capable of tying the two together have not been common. The 2019 Cloud, Aerosol and Monsoon Processes Philippines Experiment (CAMP2Ex) field project examined Southeast Asian regional sources and their effects on aerosol/cloud interactions using a combination of airborne, shipboard, and ground-based measurements. These flights sampled a variety of airmass sources over the Philippine, South China, and Sulu seas during both the southwest monsoon and monsoon transition periods. Measurements during CAMP2Ex provide a unique opportunity to investigate how these transported and local emissions affected air quality trends and airmass chemical composition. We present correlated airborne in situ enhancement ratios of CH4 to CO, using them to identify source regimes of either high urban or biomass burning influence as well as urban regimes with different emission factors. Combined with backtrajectory analysis using HYSPLIT, source regimes were examined for differences in ozone, reactive nitrogen, and aerosol chemical composition. While observed O3/CO enhancement ratios remain constant for differing urban source regimes, NOy/CO ratios varied across these regimes. For biomass burning sources, O3/CO enhancement ratios are observed to be lower than previously reported by measurements in the region.
Accurate fire emissions inventories are crucial to predict the impacts of wildland fires on air quality and atmospheric composition. Two traditional approaches are widely used to calculate fire emissions: a satellite-based top-down approach and a fuels-based bottom-up approach. However, these methods often considerably disagree on the amount of particulate mass emitted from fires. Previously available observational datasets tended to be sparse, and lacked the statistics needed to resolve these methodological discrepancies. Here, we leverage the extensive and comprehensive airborne in situ and remote sensing measurements of smoke plumes from the recent Fire Influence on Regional to Global Environments and Air Quality (FIREX-AQ) campaign to statistically assess the skill of the two traditional approaches. We use detailed campaign observations to calculate and compare emission rates at an exceptionally high resolution using three separate approaches: top-down, bottom-up, and a novel approach based entirely on integrated airborne in situ measurements. We then compute the daily average of these high-resolution estimates and compare with estimates from lower resolution, global top-down and bottom-up inventories. We uncover strong, linear relationships between all of the high-resolution emission rate estimates in aggregate, however no single approach is capable of capturing the emission characteristics of every fire. Global inventory emission rate estimates exhibited weaker correlations with the high-resolution approaches and displayed evidence of systematic bias. The disparity between the low resolution global inventories and the high resolution approaches is likely caused by high levels of uncertainty in essential variables used in bottom-up inventories and imperfect assumptions in top-down inventories.

Kevin Sanchez

and 14 more

Aerosol-cloud interactions are the most uncertain component of the Earth system, due to their major influence on cloud properties, and as a result, Earth’s energy budget. We need to better characterize these interactions, which requires constraining the cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) budget and disentangling the influences of aerosol microphysics from meteorology. Observational data are essential for evaluating and improving climate models, but airborne field campaigns have, until recently, been limited to a few (mostly continental) regions worldwide. CCN measurements over the remote ocean are scarce and only occur during extensive field missions involving airborne or ship-based measurements of limited spatial and temporal extent. Polar-orbiting satellite observations hold great promise for expanding the spatial coverage of observations to remote regions, however, it is currently not well understood to what extent these active and passive remote sensing observations can be considered adequate proxies for CCN. Recent literature make use of column integrated retrievals, such as aerosol optical depth or aerosol index, to characterize aerosol concentration and CCN, and the utility of vertically resolved optical properties from active sensors is only now becoming more fully understood. The NASA ACTIVATE, NAAMES, CAMP2EX and ORACLES field campaigns are particularly well suited for evaluating the skill of advanced satellite aerosol and cloud microphysical retrievals, given the comprehensive suite of airborne aerosol, cloud, and trace gas measurements, combined with airborne High Spectral Resolution Lidar (HSRL) and polarimetric imaging instruments that will be the basis for the next generation of space-based remote sensors. Here, we characterize the properties of aerosol and CCN from these NASA field campaigns and critically assess methods for deriving CCN and CCN proxies using visible and infrared satellite remote sensing retrievals.