1. The MILAN campaign: Studying diel light effects on the air-sea interface
- Author
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Mariana Ribas-Ribas, Manuela van Pinxteren, Luisa Galgani, Lars Riis Damgaard, Niels Peter Revsbech, Maren Striebel, Oliver Wurl, Michaela Gerriets, Christian Stolle, Philippa Rickard, Franziska Radach, Matthew Salter, Adam Saint, Nur Ili Hamizah Mustaffa, Hartmut Herrmann, Blaženka Gašparović, Paul Zieger, Rosie Chance, Jonathan Barnes, Liisa Kallajoki, Sanja Frka, Anja Engel, Birthe Zäncker, Thomas H. Badewien, Ana María Durán Quesada, Guenther Uher, Nadja Triesch, Robert C. Upstill-Goddard, Lucy J. Carpenter, and Ryan Pereira
- Subjects
Wind-driven ,Atmospheric Science ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,Sea-surface ,Interface (Java) ,010501 environmental sciences ,Atmospheric sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Sea surface microlayer ,Light effect ,Turbulence ,Atmosphere ,Wind driven ,Chemistry ,13. Climate action ,Environmental Science ,Solar radiation ,Marine Science ,14. Life underwater ,sea surface miscrolayers ,diel light effect ,aerosol ,North Sea ,chemistry ,microbiology ,Diel vertical migration ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
MILAN was a multidisciplinary, international study examining how the diel variability of sea-surface microlayer biogeochemical properties potentially impacts ocean-atmosphere interaction, in order to improve our understanding of this globally important process. The sea-surface microlayer (SML) at the air-sea interface is < 1 mm deep but it is physically, chemically and biologically distinct from the underlying water and the atmosphere above. Wind-driven turbulence and solar radiation are important drivers of SML physical and biogeochemical properties. Given that the SML is involved in all ocean-atmosphere exchanges of mass and energy, its response to solar radiation, especially in relation to how it regulates the air-sea exchange of climate-relevant gases and aerosols, is surprisingly poorly characterised. MILAN (sea-surface MIcroLAyer at Night) was an international, multidisciplinary campaign designed to specifically address this issue. In spring 2017, we deployed diverse sampling platforms (research vessels, radio-controlled catamaran, free-drifting buoy) to study full diel cycles in the coastal North Sea SML and in underlying water, and installed a land-based aerosol sampler. We also carried out concurrent ex situ experiments using several microsensors, a laboratory gas exchange tank, a solar simulator, and a sea spray simulation chamber. In this paper we outline the diversity of approaches employed and some initial results obtained during MILAN. Our observations of diel SML variability, e.g. the influence of changing solar radiation on the quantity and quality of organic material, and diel changes in wind intensity primarily forcing air-sea CO2 exchange, underline the value and the need of multidisciplinary campaigns for integrating SML complexity into the context of air-sea interaction.
- Published
- 2020