International Laboratory for Air Quality and Health, School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia; JNU-QUT Joint Laboratory for Air Quality Science and Management, Jinan University, Guangzhou, China.
International Laboratory for Air Quality and Health, School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane, Australia.
Sci Total Environ. 2023 Jan 15;856(Pt 2):159143. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.159143. Epub 2022 Oct 1.
Black carbon (BC) aerosols significantly contribute to radiative budgets globally, however their actual contributions remain poorly constrained in many under-sampled ocean regions. The tropical waters north of Australia are a part of the Indo-Pacific warm pool, regarded as a heat engine of global climate, and are in proximity to large terrestrial sources of BC aerosols such as fossil fuel emissions, and biomass burning emissions from northern Australia. Despite this, measurements of marine aerosols, especially BC remain elusive, leading to large uncertainties and discrepancies in current chemistry-climate models for this region. Here, we report the first comprehensive measurements of aerosol properties collected over the tropical warm pool in Australian waters during a voyage in late 2019. The non-marine related aerosol emissions observed in the Arafura Sea region were more intense than in the Timor Sea marine region, as the Arafura Sea was subject to greater continental outflows. The median equivalent BC (eBC) concentration in the Arafura Sea (0.66 μg m) was slightly higher than that in the Timor Sea (0.49 μg m). Source apportionment modelling and back trajectory analysis and tracer studies consistently suggest fossil fuel combustion eBC (eBC) was the dominant contributor to eBC across the entire voyage region, with biomass burning eBC (eBC) making significant additional contributions to eBC in the Arafura Sea. eBC (possibly from ship emissions or oil and gas rigs and their associated activities) and cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) were robustly correlated in the Timor Sea data, whereas eBC positively correlated to CCN in the Arafura Sea, suggesting different sources and atmospheric processing pathways occurred in these two regions. This work demonstrates the substantial impact that fossil fuel and biomass burning emissions can have on the composition of aerosols and cloud processes in the remote tropical marine atmosphere, and their potentially significant contribution to the radiative balance of the rapidly warming Indo-Pacific warm pool.
黑碳(BC)气溶胶对全球辐射预算有重大贡献,但在许多采样不足的海洋区域,其实际贡献仍不清楚。澳大利亚北部的热带水域是印度-太平洋暖池的一部分,被认为是全球气候的热机,并且靠近澳大利亚北部的化石燃料排放和生物质燃烧排放等大量陆地源的 BC 气溶胶。尽管如此,海洋气溶胶的测量,特别是 BC 的测量仍然难以实现,这导致了该地区当前化学-气候模型存在很大的不确定性和差异。在这里,我们报告了 2019 年末在澳大利亚水域热带暖池上空进行的航行中首次综合测量气溶胶特性的结果。在阿拉弗拉海地区观察到的与非海洋相关的气溶胶排放比在帝汶海海洋地区更强烈,因为阿拉弗拉海受到更大的大陆流出物的影响。阿拉弗拉海(0.66μg m)的中值等效黑碳(eBC)浓度略高于帝汶海(0.49μg m)。源分配模型以及后轨迹分析和示踪剂研究一致表明,化石燃料燃烧 eBC(eBC)是整个航行区域 eBC 的主要贡献者,而生物质燃烧 eBC(eBC)在阿拉弗拉海对 eBC 有显著的额外贡献。eBC(可能来自船舶排放或石油和天然气钻井平台及其相关活动)和云凝结核(CCN)在帝汶海数据中具有很强的相关性,而 eBC 在阿拉弗拉海与 CCN 呈正相关,这表明这两个区域发生了不同的来源和大气处理途径。这项工作表明,化石燃料和生物质燃烧排放对偏远热带海洋大气中气溶胶和云过程的组成有重大影响,并且对快速变暖的印度-太平洋暖池的辐射平衡有潜在的重要贡献。