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Sources of increase in lowermost stratospheric sulphurous and carbonaceous aerosol background concentrations during 1999-2008 derived from CARIBIC flights

Author

Summary, in English

This study focuses on sulphurous and carbonaceous aerosol, the major constituents of particulate matter in the

lowermost stratosphere (LMS), based on in situ measurements from 1999 to 2008. Aerosol particles in the size

range of 0.082 mm were collected monthly during intercontinental flights with the CARIBIC passenger

aircraft, presenting the first long-term study on carbonaceous aerosol in the LMS. Elemental concentrations

were derived via subsequent laboratory-based ion beam analysis. The stoichiometry indicates that the

sulphurous fraction is sulphate, while an O/C ratio of 0.2 indicates that the carbonaceous aerosol is organic.

The concentration of the carbonaceous component corresponded on average to approximately 25% of that of

the sulphurous, and could not be explained by forest fires or biomass burning, since the average mass ratio of

Fe to K was 16 times higher than typical ratios in effluents from biomass burning. The data reveal increasing

concentrations of particulate sulphur and carbon with a doubling of particulate sulphur from 1999 to 2008 in

the northern hemisphere LMS. Periods of elevated concentrations of particulate sulphur in the LMS are linked

to downward transport of aerosol from higher altitudes, using ozone as a tracer for stratospheric air. Tropical

volcanic eruptions penetrating the tropical tropopause are identified as the likely cause of the particulate

sulphur and carbon increase in the LMS, where entrainment of lower tropospheric air into volcanic jets and

plumes could be the cause of the carbon increase.

Publishing year

2014

Language

English

Publication/Series

Tellus. Series B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Topic

  • Climate Research
  • Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

Keywords

  • lowermost stratosphere
  • elemental composition
  • volcanic aerosol
  • sulphurous aerosol
  • carbonaceous aerosol

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0280-6509