Aerosol chemical composition and distribution during the Pacific Exploratory Mission (PEM) Tropics
Author(s) -
Dibb J. E.,
Talbot R. W.,
Scheuer E. M.,
Blake D. R.,
Blake N. J.,
Gregory G. L.,
Sachse G. W.,
Thornton D. C.
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.67
H-Index - 298
eISSN - 2156-2202
pISSN - 0148-0227
DOI - 10.1029/1998jd100001
Subject(s) - troposphere , precipitation , tropics , mixing ratio , aerosol , environmental science , altitude (triangle) , sulfate , atmospheric sciences , sea salt , oceanography , geology , chemistry , meteorology , geography , fishery , biology , geometry , mathematics , organic chemistry
Distributions of aerosol‐associated soluble ions over much of the South Pacific were determined by sampling from the NASA DC‐8 as part of the Pacific Exploratory Mission (PEM) Tropics campaign. The mixing ratios of all ionic species were surprisingly low throughout the free troposphere (2–12 km), despite the pervasive influence from biomass burning plumes advecting over the South Pacific from the west during PEM‐Tropics. At the same time, the specific activity of 7 Be frequently exceeded 1000 fCi m −3 through much of the depth of the troposphere. These distributions indicate that the plumes must have been efficiently scavenged by precipitation (removing the soluble ions), but that the scavenging must have occurred far upwind of the DC‐8 sampling regions (otherwise 7 Be activities would also have been low). This inference is supported by large enhancements of HNO 3 and carboxylic acids in many of the plumes, as these soluble acidic gases would also be readily scavenged in any precipitation events. Decreasing mixing ratios of NH 4 + with altitude in all South Pacific regions sampled provide support for recent suggestions that oceanic emissions of NH 3 constitute a significant source far from continents. Our sampling below 2 km reaffirms the latitudinal pattern in the methylsulfonate/non‐sea‐salt sulfate (MSA/nss SO 4 = ) molar ratio established through surface‐based and shipboard sampling, with values increasing from <0.05 in the tropics to nearly 0.6 at 70°S. However, we also found very high values of this ratio (0.2–0.5) at 10 km altitude above the intertropical convergence zone near 10°N. It appears that wet convective pumping of dimethylsulfide from the tropical marine boundary layer is responsible for the high values of the MSA/nss SO 4 = ratio in the tropical upper troposphere. This finding complicates use of this ratio to infer the zonal origin of biogenic S transported long distances.
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