Single‐particle measurements of midlatitude black carbon and light‐scattering aerosols from the boundary layer to the lower stratosphere
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences · University of Colorado Boulder · +7 more institutions
Abstract
A single‐particle soot photometer (SP2) was flown on a NASA WB‐57F high‐altitude research aircraft in November 2004 from Houston, Texas. The SP2 uses laser‐induced incandescence to detect individual black carbon (BC) particles in an air sample in the mass range of ∼3–300 fg (∼0.15–0.7 μm volume equivalent diameter). Scattered light is used to size the remaining non‐BC aerosols in the range of ∼0.17–0.7 μm diameter. We present profiles of both aerosol types from the boundary layer to the lower stratosphere from two midlatitude flights. Results for total aerosol amounts in the size range detected by the SP2 are in good agreement with typical particle spectrometer measurements in the same region. All ambient…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.29
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
21- JPJoshua P. SchwarzCorresponding
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory
- RSR. S. Gao
NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory
- DWD. W. Fahey
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory
- DSD. S. Thomson
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory
- LAL. A. Watts
Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder, NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory
Topics & keywords
- Aerosol
- Stratosphere
- Atmospheric sciences
- Soot
- Carbon black
- Particle (ecology)
- Environmental science
- Altitude (triangle)