1. Rainforest Aerosols as Biogenic Nuclei of Clouds and Precipitation in the Amazon
- Author
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Rebecca M. Garland, Stephan Borrmann, Hang Su, G. Helas, Jose L. Jimenez, Sachin S. Gunthe, J. A. Huffman, Anthony J. Prenni, Ulrich Pöschl, Meinrat O. Andreae, Baerbel Sinha, Scot T. Martin, S. R. Zorn, Diana Rose, Qi Chen, Johannes Schneider, Delphine K. Farmer, Stephen M. King, Theotonio Pauliquevis, Markus D. Petters, Antonio O. Manzi, Pontus Roldin, Eugene Mikhailov, and Paulo Artaxo
- Subjects
Biogeochemical cycle ,Multidisciplinary ,Meteorology ,Amazon rainforest ,Ice nucleus ,Environmental science ,Cloud condensation nuclei ,Cloud physics ,Precipitation ,Water cycle ,Atmospheric sciences ,Aerosol - Abstract
Clean or Dirty Aerosols strongly affect atmospheric properties and processes—including visibility, cloud formation, and radiative behavior. Knowing their effects in both clean and polluted air is necessary in order to understand their influence (see the Perspective by Baltensperger ). Clarke and Kapustin (p. 1488 ) examine vertical atmospheric profiles collected above the Pacific Ocean, where air quality is affected by the transport of polluted air from the west, and find significant regional enhancements in light scattering, aerosol mass, and aerosol number associated with combustion. Aerosol particle concentrations in this region can exceed values in clean, unperturbed regions by over an order of magnitude. Thus combustion affects hemispheric aerosol optical depth and the distribution of cloud condensation nuclei. Pöschl et al. (p. 1513 ) discuss the composition of aerosols above the Amazon Basin, in the pristine conditions of the rainy season. The aerosols in this region are derived mostly from gaseous biogenic precursors, plants, and microorganisms, and particle concentration is orders of magnitude lower than in polluted continental regions.
- Published
- 2010
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