糖心视频

June 15, 2020

Pollution in Asian tropopause layer comes from human activities and natural sources, study finds

The two transport pathways for aerosols. Credit: WU Xue
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The two transport pathways for aerosols. Credit: WU Xue

The Asian Tropopause Aerosol Layer (ATAL) is a thin layer of aerosol with a thickness of about 3-4 km, which appears regularly at the height of the tropopause layer during the Asian summer monsoon (ASM) period over the Tibetan Plateau. How is it formed? Where are aerosols from? There questions have been debated since the discovery of ATAL in 2011.

Drs. Zhang Jinqiang and Wu Xue from the Institute of Atmospheric 糖心视频ics (IAP) of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), in collaboration with scientists from the Aerospace Information Research Institute of CAS, conducted in situ observations using a balloon-borne portable optical particle counter (POPS), aiming to further understand the composition and sources of the ATAL. The observation campaigns were conducted in the summer of 2018 and 2019 at Golmud and Qaidam in Qinghai Province of China.

"If we would like to further understand the possible source regions of the observed aerosols, a Lagrangian particle dispersion model is the right tool to do the job," said Wu.

They combined the observations with the simulation results from a Lagrangian model called MPTRAC and found that part of the in the ATAL was transported vertically from the Earth's surface at the southwest of the Himalayas to the ATAL by the convection formed during the ASM season; while the majority of the aerosols could be transported from the upper troposphere to the tropopause via a spiral upward transport inside of the ASM anticyclone. So the composition of the aerosols in Southwest Asia in the boundary layer, as well as the aerosols in the upper troposphere may eventually influence the ATAL.

The camp of the 2019 summer campaign at Qaidam, Qianghai China. Credit: ZHANG Jinqiang
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The camp of the 2019 summer campaign at Qaidam, Qianghai China. Credit: ZHANG Jinqiang

"The aerosols in the are mostly pollution out of human activities, and the aerosols in the upper troposphere may also contain natural aerosols, like mineral dust and volcanic sulfate aerosols," said Wu.

In situ observations for multiple years are essential to studying the ATAL, and Zhang is now preparing campaign in the 2020 summer.

Their study was recently published in Environmental Research Letters.

More information: Jinqiang Zhang et al. Aerosol variations in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere over the Tibetan Plateau, Environmental Research Letters (2020).

Journal information: Environmental Research Letters

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