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Desert Dust Layers Over Polluted Marine Boundary Layers: ACE-2 Measurements and ACE-Asia PlansAerosols in ACE-Asia are expected to have some commonalties with those in ACE-2, along with important differences. Among the commonalities are occurrences of desert dust layers over polluted marine boundary layers. Differences include the nature of the dust (yellowish in the East Asia desert outflow, vs. reddish-brown in the Sahara Outflow measured in ACE-2) and the composition of boundary-layer aerosols (e.g., more absorbing, soot and organic aerosol in-the Asian plume, caused by coal and biomass burning, with limited controls). In this paper we present ACE-2 measurements and analyses as a guide to our plans for ACE-2 Asia. The measurements include: (1) Vertical profiles of aerosol optical depth and extinction (380-1558 nm), and of water vapor column and concentration, from the surface through the elevated desert dust, measured by the 14-channel Ames Airborne Tracking Sunphotometer (AATS-14); (2) Comparisons of airborne and shipborne sunphotometer optical depths to satellite-retrieved values, with and without desert dust; (3) Comparisons between airborne Sunphotometer optical depth and extinction spectra and those derived from coincident airborne in situ measurements of aerosol size distribution, scattering and absorption; (4) Comparisons between size distributions measured in situ and retrieved from sunphotometer optical depth spectra; (5) Comparisons between aerosol single scattering albedo values obtained by several techniques, using various combinations of measurements of backscatter, extinction, size distribution, scattering, absorption, and radiative flux. We show how analyses of these data can be used to address questions important to ACE-Asia, such as: (1) How do dust and other absorbing aerosols affect the accuracy of satellite optical depth retrievals? How important are asphericity effects? (2) How important are supermicron dust and seasalt aerosols to overall aerosol optical depth and radiative forcing? How well are these aerosols sampled by aircraft inlets and instruments? (3) How consistent are suborbital in situ and remote measurements of aerosols, among themselves and with satellite retrievals? What are the main reasons for observed inconsistencies?
Document ID
20010087130
Acquisition Source
Ames Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Russell, Philip B.
(NASA Ames Research Center Moffett Field, CA United States)
Schmid, B.
(Bay Area Environmental Research Inst. San Francisco, CA United States)
Livingston, J. M.
(SRI International Corp. Menlo Park, CA United States)
Redemann, J.
(Bay Area Environmental Research Inst. San Francisco, CA United States)
Bergstrom, R. W.
(Bay Area Environmental Research Inst. San Francisco, CA United States)
Condon, Estelle P.
Date Acquired
August 20, 2013
Publication Date
January 9, 2000
Subject Category
Environment Pollution
Funding Number(s)
PROJECT: RTOP 146-10-04-51-78
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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