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Title: | Origins and spatial distribution of non-pure sulfate particles (Nsps) in the stratosphere detected by the balloon-borne light optical aerosols counter (loac) |
Authors: | Renard, J. -B. Berthet, G. Levasseur-Regourd, A. -C. Beresnev, S. Miffre, A. Rairoux, P. Vignelles, D. Jégou, F. |
Issue Date: | 2020 |
Publisher: | MDPI AG |
Citation: | Origins and spatial distribution of non-pure sulfate particles (Nsps) in the stratosphere detected by the balloon-borne light optical aerosols counter (loac) / J. -B. Renard, G. Berthet, A. -C. Levasseur-Regourd, et al. — DOI 10.3390/atmos11101031 // Atmosphere. — 2020. — Vol. 11. — Iss. 10. — 1031. |
Abstract: | While water and sulfuric acid droplets are the main component of stratospheric aerosols, measurements performed for about 30 years have shown that non-sulfate particles (NSPs) are also present. Such particles, released from the Earth mainly through volcanic eruptions, pollution or biomass burning, or coming from space, present a wide variety of compositions, sizes, and shapes. To better understand the origin of NSPs, we have performed measurements with the Light Optical Aerosol Counter (LOAC) during 151 flights under weather balloons in the 2013–2019 period reaching altitudes up to 35 km. Coupled with previous counting measurements conducted over the 2004–2011 period, the LOAC measurements indicate the presence of stratospheric layers of enhanced concentrations associated with NSPs, with a bimodal vertical repartition ranging between 17 and 30 km altitude. Such enhancements are not correlated with permanent meteor shower events. They may be linked to dynamical and photophoretic effects lifting and sustaining particles coming from the Earth. Besides, large particles, up to several tens of µm, were detected and present decreasing concentrations with increasing altitudes. All these particles can originate from Earth but also from meteoroid disintegrations and from the interplanetary dust cloud and comets. © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. |
Keywords: | BALLOON COUNTING NON-SULFATE STRATOSPHERIC AEROSOLS TYPOLOGY AEROSOLS EARTH (PLANET) SULFUR COMPOUNDS VOLCANOES BIOMASS-BURNING INTERPLANETARY DUST LARGE PARTICLES STRATOSPHERIC AEROSOLS SULFATE PARTICLES VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS METEOROLOGICAL BALLOONS AEROSOL BALLOON OBSERVATION MEASUREMENT METHOD PARTICULATE MATTER POINT SOURCE SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION STRATOSPHERE SULFATE TYPOLOGY |
URI: | http://elar.urfu.ru/handle/10995/101388 |
Access: | info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess |
SCOPUS ID: | 85092711590 |
WOS ID: | 000584208900001 |
PURE ID: | 786cc0cd-92d1-45ec-a45b-d9ca9b115cda 14155332 |
ISSN: | 20734433 |
DOI: | 10.3390/atmos11101031 |
Sponsorship: | The LOAC instruments were funded by the French Labex “Étude des géofluides et des VOLatils–Terre, Atmosphère et Interfaces–Ressources et Environnement” (VOLTAIRE) (ANR-10-LABX-100-01) managed by the University of Orleans. The STAC and LOAC flights were funded by the French Space Agency CNES. We want to thank the CNES balloons launching team at Aire sur l’Adour, the MeteoModem Company for the flight for Ury (France), and Nelson Bègue and the LACy for the flights at Ile de la Réunion. We want to thank Marie-Agnès Courty for information concerning the local production of nanocomposite in the atmosphere, Andrei Vedernikov for fruitful discussion, the reviewers for their useful comments, and finally CNES for its support of the Rosetta mission and its scientific data analysis. Sergey Beresnev wants to thank the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Russian Federation, project № FEUZ-2020-0057. |
Appears in Collections: | Научные публикации ученых УрФУ, проиндексированные в SCOPUS и WoS CC |
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