Search Results

Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • Item
    Ship-based measurements of ice nuclei concentrations over the Arctic, Atlantic, Pacific and Southern oceans
    (Katlenburg-Lindau : EGU, 2020) Welti, André; Bigg, Keith E.; DeMott, Paul J.; Gong, Xianda; Hartmann, Markus; Harvey, Mike; Henning, Silvia; Herenz, Paul; Hill, Thomas C.J.; Hornblow, Blake; Leck, Caroline; Löffler, Mareike; McCluskey, Christina S.; Rauker, Anne Marie; Schmale, Julia; Tatzelt, Christian; van Pinxteren, Manuela; Stratmann, Frank
    Ambient concentrations of ice-forming particles measured during ship expeditions are collected and summarised with the aim of determining the spatial distribution and variability in ice nuclei in oceanic regions. The presented data from literature and previously unpublished data from over 23 months of ship-based measurements stretch from the Arctic to the Southern Ocean and include a circumnavigation of Antarctica. In comparison to continental observations, ship-based measurements of ambient ice nuclei show 1 to 2 orders of magnitude lower mean concentrations. To quantify the geographical variability in oceanic areas, the concentration range of potential ice nuclei in different climate zones is analysed by meridionally dividing the expedition tracks into tropical, temperate and polar climate zones. We find that concentrations of ice nuclei in these meridional zones follow temperature spectra with similar slopes but vary in absolute concentration. Typically, the frequency with which specific concentrations of ice nuclei are observed at a certain temperature follows a log-normal distribution. A consequence of the log-normal distribution is that the mean concentration is higher than the most frequently measured concentration. Finally, the potential contribution of ship exhaust to the measured ice nuclei concentration on board research vessels is analysed as function of temperature. We find a sharp onset of the influence at approximately 36 C but none at warmer temperatures that could bias ship-based measurements. © Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
  • Item
    Marine nanogels as a source of atmospheric nanoparticles in the high Arctic
    (Hoboken, NJ : Wiley, 2013) Karl, Matthias; Leck, Caroline; Coz, Esther; Heintzenberg, Jost
    The high Arctic (north of 80°N) in summer is a region characterized by clean air and low abundances of preexisting particles. Marine colloidal nanogels i.e., assembled dissolved organic carbohydrate polymer networks have recently been confirmed to be present in both airborne particles and cloud water over the Arctic pack ice area. A novel route to atmospheric nanoparticles that appears to be operative in the high Arctic is suggested. It involves the injection of marine granular nanogels into the air from evaporating fog and cloud droplets, and is supported by observational and theoretical evidence obtained from a case study. Statistical analysis of the aerosol size distribution data recorded in the years 1991, 1996, 2001, and 2008 classified 75 nanoparticle events - covering 17% of the observed time period - as nanogel-type events, characterized by the spontaneous appearance of several distinct size bands below 200 nm diameter.