Aerosol loading in the Southeastern United States: reconciling surface and satellite observations
Author(s)
Ford, B.; Heald, Colette L.
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We investigate the seasonality in aerosols over the Southeastern United States using observations from several satellite instruments (MODIS, MISR, CALIOP) and surface network sites (IMPROVE, SEARCH, AERONET). We find that the strong summertime enhancement in satellite-observed aerosol optical depth (AOD) (factor 2–3 enhancement over wintertime AOD) is not present in surface mass concentrations (25–55% summertime enhancement). Goldstein et al. (2009) previously attributed this seasonality in AOD to biogenic organic aerosol; however, surface observations show that organic aerosol only accounts for ∼35% of fine particulate matter (smaller than 2.5 μm in aerodynamic diameter, PM[subscript 2.5]) and exhibits similar seasonality to total surface PM[subscript 2.5]. The GEOS-Chem model generally reproduces these surface aerosol measurements, but underrepresents the AOD seasonality observed by satellites. We show that seasonal differences in water uptake cannot sufficiently explain the magnitude of AOD increase. As CALIOP profiles indicate the presence of additional aerosol in the lower troposphere (below 700 hPa), which cannot be explained by vertical mixing, we conclude that the discrepancy is due to a missing source of aerosols above the surface layer in summer.
Date issued
2013-09Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary SciencesJournal
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Citation
Ford, B., and C. L. Heald. “Aerosol loading in the Southeastern United States: reconciling surface and satellite observations.” Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 13, no. 18 (September 16, 2013): 9269-9283.
Version: Final published version
ISSN
1680-7324
1680-7316