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Haze episodes at Syowa Station, Antarctica

Authors :
Keiichiro Hara
Kazuo Osada
Masanori Yabuki
Gen Hashida
Takashi Yamanouchi
Masahiko Hayashi
Masataka Shiobara
Chiharu Nishita-Hara
Makoto Wada
Source :
Antarctic Record, Vol 54, Iss special issue, Pp 593-622 (2010)
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
National Institute of Polar Research, 2010.

Abstract

During our aerosol measurement program at Syowa Station, Antarctica in 2004-2007, some low visibility (haze) phenomena were observed under conditions with weak wind and without drifting snow and fog in winter-spring. In the "Antarctic haze" phenomenon, the number concentration of aerosol particles and black carbon concentration increased by one-two orders higher relative to background conditions at Syowa Station, while surface O_3 concentration simultaneously dropped especially after polar sunrise. Major aerosol constituents in the haze phenomenon were sea-salts (e.g., Na^+ and Cl^-). From the trajectory analysis and NAAPS model, the plumes from biomass burning in South America and southern Africa were transported to Syowa Station, Antarctic coast, during eastward (occasionally westward) approach of cyclones in the Southern Ocean. Thus, poleward flow of the plume from mid-latitudes and injection of sea-salt particles during the transport may lead to the Antarctic haze phenomenon at Syowa Station. The difference of O_3 concentration between the background and the haze conditions tended to be larger in spring (polar sunrise) relative to that in winter. Because enhancement of sea-salt particles can play an important role as an additional source of reactive halogen species, the haze episodes might make a significant contribution to surface O_3 depletion during the polar sunrise on the Antarctic coast.

Subjects

Subjects :
Geography (General)
G1-922

Details

Language :
English, Japanese
ISSN :
00857289 and 2432079X
Volume :
54
Issue :
special issue
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Antarctic Record
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2d649a3dc69345b28c67a2a5f4f2bcda
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15094/00009576