Title of article :
Microphysical and optical properties of aerosol particles in urban zone during ESCOMPTE
Author/Authors :
Mallet، نويسنده , , M. and Roger، نويسنده , , J.C. and Despiau، نويسنده , , S. and Dubovik، نويسنده , , O. and Putaud، نويسنده , , J.P.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Abstract :
Microphysical and optical properties of the main aerosol species on a peri-urban site have been investigated during the ESCOMPTE experiment. Ammonium sulfate (AS), nitrate (N), black carbon (BC), particulate organic matter (POM), sea salt (SS) and mineral aerosol (D) size distributions have been used, associated with their refractive index, to compute, from the Mie theory, the key radiative aerosol properties as the extinction coefficient Kext, the mass extinction efficiencies σext, the single scattering albedo ω0 and the asymmetry parameter g at the wavelength of 550 nm. Optical computations show that 90% of the light extinction is due to anthropogenic aerosol and only 10% is due to natural aerosol (SS and D). 44±6% of the extinction is due to (AS) and 40±6% to carbonaceous particles (20±4% to BC and 21±4% to POM). Nitrate aerosol has a weak contribution of 5±2%. Computations of the mass extinction efficiencies σext, single scattering albedo ω0 and asymmetry parameter g indicate that the optical properties of the anthropogenic aerosol are often quite different from those yet published and generally used in global models. For example, the (AS) mean specific mass extinction presents a large difference with the value classically adopted at low relative humidity (h<60%) (2.6±0.5 instead of 6 m2 g−1 at 550 nm). The optical properties of the total aerosol layer, including all the aerosol species, indicate a mean observed single-scattering albedo ω0=0.85±0.05, leading to an important absorption of the solar radiation and an asymmetry parameter g=0.59±0.05 which are in a reasonably good agreements with the AERONET retrieval of ω0 (=0.86±0.05) and g (=0.64±0.05) at this wavelength.
Keywords :
Chemical composition , Aerosol Optical Properties , climate change , aerosol , Aerosol number size distribution
Journal title :
Atmospheric Research
Journal title :
Atmospheric Research