Oslo joint seminar in atmospheric, ocean and climate science, Sep. 5

Title: The role of new particle formation in the remote atmosphere: Improving our understanding through global-scale in-situ measurements from the NASA atmospheric tomography mission.

Speaker:  Christina Williamson, NCAR

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Speaker:

Christina Williamson, NCAR

Abstract: 

Cloud modifications due to aerosol are still the largest uncertainty on total anthropogenic radiative forcing in global climate models. A large part of this uncertainty is related to the number and spatial distribution of cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) in the global atmosphere. Aerosol from new particle formation (NPF) may account for more than 50% of CCN in global low-level clouds, yet the processes that form, grow and remove these particles are under-constrained. This is particularly true in remote regions, where aerosol from NPF are more likely to influence cloud properties and thus global radiative balance.

Between 2016 and 2018 we flew a substantial aerosol payload over the remote Pacific and Atlantic oceans (86° S - 83° N) on the NASA Atmospheric Tomography Mission (ATom). The flights were conducted once in each of the four seasons, with constant profiling between 0.2 and 12 km altitude. We measured aerosol size distributions from 3 nm to 930 mm in diameter, as well as single particle and bulk aerosol chemical composition.

We present analysis of the role of NPF in the remote atmosphere, including the location, frequency and seasonality of NPF occurring in the free troposphere and boundary layer. In areas where our measurements show a clear link between NPF and production of CCN, we compare our observations to global chemistry-climate models to asses model skill in representing these aerosol and their effect on global radiative balance.

 

What is the Joint Oslo Seminar (JOS):

Atmospheric and climate sciences have a stronghold in Oslo among the four institutions University of Oslo, the Meteorological Institute, CICERO and NILU. This joint seminar invites renowned international experts to contribute to an informal series of lectures, meant to create interaction with the Oslo atmospheric and climate science community on recent highlights and analysis in the field. All seminars will be held on Thursdays (Noon -1pm) and lunch (sandwiches) will be served on a “first-come-first-served”-basis.

Published Aug. 14, 2019 10:55 AM - Last modified Aug. 29, 2022 11:43 AM