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TRACER-CAT-UCDAVIS

TRACER-CAT-UCDavis

1 July 2022 - 31 July 2022

Lead Scientist: Chris Cappa

Observatory: OSC

Through their ability to absorb sunlight, absorbing aerosols have important, yet uncertain, impacts on the global radiation budget and cloud properties. A key contributor to these uncertainties is incomplete understanding of the extent to which mixing with or coating of absorbing aerosols by other aerosol components—and by water especially—alters absorbing aerosol absorption. To improve understanding of absorbing aerosol properties and behavior in the atmosphere, we will deploy new and existing experimental tools during the Tracking Aerosol Convection Interactions Experiment (TRACER) campaign in Houston, Texas as part of the Carbonaceous Aerosols Thrust (CAT). Using these tools, we will characterize a wide range of aerosol optical, chemical, and physical properties in detail, complementing and expanding on the planned TRACER instrumentation. This will allow for more detailed characterization of TRACER-relevant aerosol properties, such as the composition of particles that can act as cloud condensation nuclei, than would otherwise be available. Our measurements will also allow for assessment of the relationship(s) between absorbing aerosol optical properties and their chemical and physical characteristics (including the mixing state of black carbon [BC]-containing particles). Finally, we will establish the response of absorption to relative humidity increases and mixing of absorbing aerosols with other aerosol components.

These field observations will occur in collaboration with Los Alamos National Laboratory in summer 2021 during the TRACER intensive operational period. The instrumentation we co-deploy will provide for measurement of many aerosol characteristics, including the following:

  1. multi-wavelength dry aerosol absorption, scattering, and extinction
  2. the size-dependent composition and abundance of sub-micron aerosol, differentiating between those particles that do and do not contain black carbon
  3. black carbon-specific concentrations and size distributions and total sub-micron particle concentrations and size distributions, and
  4. the first field measurements at an ARM site of the influence of relative humidity on multi-wavelength absorption by ambient absorbing aerosols.

We will use the variability of the atmosphere and aerosol sources in the Houston region to:

  1. specifically disentangle contributions to light absorption from black carbon, absorbing organic carbon (brown carbon), and coatings on black carbon
  2. characterize black carbon mixing state— that is, compositional differences between different particles—and assess the factors that give rise to compositional differences between black carbon-containing and black carbon-free aerosol, and
  3. establish how water uptake influences absorption and how any such effect depends on particle composition and black carbon mixing state.

Through the deployment of complementary, advanced instrumentation for characterization of a wide range of aerosol properties, our proposed work will help to maximize the scientific impact of the TRACER campaign. Our work will also allow for development of new insights into the relationship(s) between aerosol composition, hygroscopicity, and the mixing state of BC with aerosol optical properties. Through this, our work will provide knowledge that can improve understanding and model representation of aerosol processes as they affect the Earth’s radiation budget.

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Co-Investigators

Qi Zhang

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Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) | Reviewed May 2024