Articles | Volume 21, issue 12
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-9497-2021
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-9497-2021
Research article
 | 
23 Jun 2021
Research article |  | 23 Jun 2021

Summer aerosol measurements over the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone

Jack B. Simmons, Ruhi S. Humphries, Stephen R. Wilson, Scott D. Chambers, Alastair G. Williams, Alan D. Griffiths, Ian M. McRobert, Jason P. Ward, Melita D. Keywood, and Sean Gribben
Abstract

Aerosol measurements over the Southern Ocean have been identified as critical to an improved understanding of aerosol–radiation and aerosol–cloud interactions, as there currently exists significant discrepancies between model results and measurements in this region. The atmosphere above the Southern Ocean provides crucial insight into an aerosol regime relatively free from anthropogenic influence, yet its remoteness ensures atmospheric measurements are relatively rare. Here we present observations from the Polar Cell Aerosol Nucleation (PCAN) campaign, hosted aboard the RV Investigator during a summer (January–March) 2017 voyage from Hobart, Australia, to the East Antarctic seasonal sea ice zone. A median particle number concentration (condensation nuclei > 3 nm; CN3) of 354 (95 % CI 345–363) cm−3 was observed from the voyage. Median cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentrations were 167 (95 % CI 158–176) cm−3. Measured particle size distributions suggested that aerosol populations had undergone significant cloud processing. To understand the variability in aerosol observations, measurements were classified by meteorological variables. Wind direction and absolute humidity were used to identify different air masses, and aerosol measurements were compared based on these identifications. CN3 concentrations measured during SE wind directions (median 594 cm−3) were higher than those measured during wind directions from the NW (median 265 cm−3). Increased frequency of measurements from these wind directions suggests the influence of large-scale atmospheric transport mechanisms on the local aerosol population in the boundary layer of the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone. Modelled back trajectories imply different air mass histories for each measurement group, supporting this suggestion. CN3 and CCN concentrations were higher during periods where the absolute humidity was less than 4.3 gH2O/m3, indicative of free tropospheric or Antarctic continental air masses, compared to other periods of the voyage. Increased aerosol concentration in air masses originating close to the Antarctic coastline have been observed in numerous other studies. However, the smaller changes observed in the present analyses suggest seasonal differences in atmospheric circulation, including lesser impact of synoptic low-pressure systems in summer. Further measurements in the region are required before a more comprehensive picture of atmospheric circulation in this region can be captured and its influence on local aerosol populations understood.

Dates
1 Introduction

Aerosol–radiation and aerosol–cloud interactions are among the most uncertain parameters in the current estimates of global radiative forcing (Carslaw et al., 2013; Myhre et al., 2013) and hence a major uncertainty in calculating the climate effects of changing atmospheric composition. In particular, there is a need for reliable estimates for aerosol loadings in the pre-industrial atmosphere, as this is the reference point for many calculations and the largest contributor to uncertainties in changes in aerosol radiative forcing over the industrial period (Carslaw et al., 2013; Regayre et al., 2014; McCoy et al., 2020). Unlike greenhouse gases, the radiative impact of aerosols cannot be determined from atmospheric archives. However, measurements in pristine remote regions of the Earth can provide an insight into pre-industrial aerosol populations and processes (Carslaw et al., 2017) and have therefore been identified as critical to reducing this uncertainty (Carslaw et al., 2013). Measurements from the Southern Ocean particularly, distant from anthropogenic and continental influence, have been identified as critical to constraining uncertainty in aerosol radiative forcing (Penner et al., 2012; Regayre et al., 2020), and the value of adding Southern Ocean measurements in substantially reducing the uncertainty in estimates of the radiative forcing due to aerosol–cloud interactions has been recognised (Regayre et al., 2020).

Aerosol optical depth (AOD) is also not well understood in this region. Comparison between models and satellite measurements of AOD shows significant underprediction by the models in this region (Shindell et al., 2013) during the summer, possibly related to the modelling of biological aerosol precursors and their chemistry (Revell et al., 2019). It must also be noted satellite measurements are also poorly validated in this region due to the lack of in situ measurements in a region of high cloudiness.

Simulated sea surface temperatures (SSTs) over the Southern Ocean from models participating in CMIP5 (the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project, Phase 5) contain biases attributed to cloud-related error (Hyder et al., 2018), which may relate indirectly to local aerosol populations. Error in modelled SST can propagate through and contribute uncertainty to other parts of global climate models.

There is a persistent positive bias in the predictions of absorbed shortwave radiation over the Southern Ocean, the partial correction of which results in increased air mass movement poleward in the Southern Hemisphere (Kay et al., 2016).

There are therefore two significant motivations encouraging in situ aerosol measurement campaigns in the remote Southern Ocean: the pristine nature of the local aerosol regime provides an important proxy for an unpolluted pre-industrial atmosphere valuable for assessing aerosol influence on global radiative forcing; and there is a need to provide further observational constraints in a region of the planet which is difficult to simulate and which therefore contributes uncertainty to global climate models.

Surface measurements in the remote Southern Ocean are scarce due to the extreme atmospheric and oceanic conditions, along with the remoteness which defines the region. Longer term in situ measurements have been made at terrestrial stations on the fringes of the Southern Ocean, such as Cape Grim, Tasmania (40.7 S 144.7 E) (Gras and Keywood, 2017), Macquarie Island (54.5 S 158.9 E) (Brechtel et al., 1998), and Dumont D'Urville Station, Antarctica (66.7 S 140.0 E) (Legrand et al., 2016). There have also been numerous short-term ship-based aerosol measurement campaigns in the region. Ship-based measurements taken between 41 and 54 S observed a bimodal aerosol population dominated by sea salt (Quinn et al., 1998) during the ACE1 campaign. Sea salt aerosol dominated the mid- and high-latitude Southern Ocean boundary layer aerosol mass concentration, with the aerosol generated by processes such as sea spray and bubble bursting. Voyages to and from Antarctica have also proved valuable. O'Dowd et al. (1997) observed polar and maritime air masses with distinctly different aerosol properties, with sulfate aerosols dominating the polar air mass accumulation mode. Dominant sulfate contribution to local aerosol populations has also been observed at coastal stations on the Antarctic continent (Shaw, 1988). The source of sulfate in the near-shore region of the remote Southern Ocean is believed to be biological: phytoplankton blooms emit dimethyl sulfide (DMS), which is oxidised in the atmosphere and can eventually condense and grow aerosol (Rinaldi et al., 2010). The distribution of phytoplankton populations is non-uniform and has a strong seasonal signal. A relationship between methane sulfonic acid (MSA, a DMS oxidation product) and CCN concentration has been observed at Cape Grim (Ayers and Gras, 1991), along with a summer maximum in CCN concentration related to the strength of the phytoplankton DMS source (Gras and Keywood, 2017). The greatest population of these phytoplankton is observed during the spring and summer sea ice melt in areas in the seasonal ice zone (Deppeler and Davidson, 2017). The seasonal sea ice zone, the area of ocean between the permanent ice edge and winter sea ice maximum, covers a larger spatial area than the Antarctic continent itself.

Aerosol measurements in the seasonal ice zone are therefore of particular interest due to the proximity to the largest secondary aerosol precursor source in the region. Previous measurements in this zone are sparse though have increased in number in the past decade. Davison et al. (1996) found maximum levels of DMS and methanesulfonic acid in aerosols in the seasonal sea ice region compared to open oceans further north. Other voyages have observed new particle formation events (Atkinson et al., 2012) and a previously unaccounted source of organic nitrogen in seasonal ice zone aerosol populations (Dall'Osto et al., 2017). These results suggest aerosol populations of the seasonal ice zones are distinct from those of the Antarctic continent and the mid-latitudes and upper latitudes of Southern Ocean. Campaigns in the last decade, such as SOAP (Law et al., 2017), SIPEXII (Humphries et al., 2015), ACE-SPACE (Schmale et al., 2019), CAPRICORN (Humphries et al., 2021), MARCUS, and SOCRATES (Sanchez et al., 2021), have measured aerosol properties in the Antarctic seasonal ice zone from ship-based and aircraft platforms.

Measurements from the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone are particularly scarce, though there is a growing body of research including measurements from this region. The first results from this region, produced from the 2012 SIPEXII campaign on board the icebreaker Aurora Australis were surprising: a step change increase in aerosol number concentration crossing the atmospheric polar front into the polar cell (Humphries et al., 2016). The atmospheric polar front is the mobile boundary between the Ferrel and polar cells, the two major circulation cells impacting the Antarctic sea ice zone, located at latitudes around 60 S. A newly identified circulation mechanism that brought recently formed free-tropospheric secondary aerosols to the polar cell surface was proposed to explain this observation (Humphries et al., 2016). Alroe et al. (2020) also observed a change in aerosol populations across the atmospheric polar front, attributing the change to increased aerosol precursor concentration in the polar cell and free troposphere–boundary layer air mass exchange in synoptic level systems. Aerosol formation above the marine boundary layer was directly observed above the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone by Sanchez et al. (2021). They also noted that air masses with the highest particle concentrations observed during the voyage had recently crossed the Antarctic coast. A recent study ingesting measurements from multiple voyages to this region of the Southern Ocean reports significantly increased MSA concentrations in the parts of the Southern Ocean closest to the Antarctic coast, alongside enhancements in CCN concentration in the latitude band 65–70 S. (Humphries et al., 2021).

A further influence on aerosol properties is the katabatic drainage off the Antarctic continent. Chambers et al. (2018), using measurements from the presently discussed voyage, observed the influence of katabatic outflow on ship-based aerosol measurements up to 200 km from the coast. This outflow would transport air that has been in contact with the continent to regions where free tropospheric air might be expected.

Here aerosol number concentrations and aerosol size distributions taken during a voyage to the seasonal ice zone of East Antarctica in the austral summer of early 2017 are presented. Measurements were made on the RV Investigator during the Polar Cell Aerosol Nucleation (PCAN) project. The scientific motivations of this work are as follows: (1) report on aerosol measurements of the poorly understood and infrequently measured East Antarctic seasonal ice zone, (2) attempt to better understand the atmospheric boundary at the polar front observed in this region in multiple recent studies, and (3) compare the austral summer measurements presented here with those taken in spring 2012 in the same location.

https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/21/9497/2021/acp-21-9497-2021-f01

Figure 1Voyage tracks of the SIPEX-II (spring 2012, grey) and periods of the PCAN voyage (summer 2017, orange), for which measurements were analysed. Measurements from the southward PCAN transit are excluded due to instrument malfunction. Grey shading represents the sea ice area observed at the midpoint of the SIPEXII voyage, as detected by the Nimbus-7 satellite (National Snow and Ice Data Centre, 2021). No sea ice was present in the plotted region at the midpoint of the PCAN voyage. Nearby Antarctic stations are plotted to assist interpretation. An interactive map of RV Investigator voyage tracks can be found here: https://www.cmar.csiro.au/data/underway/?survey=in2017_v01 (last access: 2 June 2021).

2 Methods

2.1 Measurement platform

Measurements were made aboard the RV Investigator, Australia's flagship blue-water research vessel managed by CSIRO's Marine National Facility, during the voyage IN2017-V01. The onboard atmospheric measurements (the Polar Cell Aerosol Nucleation project; PCAN) were a secondary objective of the voyage, the primary focus of which was mapping the bathymetry off the East Antarctic coast and retrieving sediment samples. The voyage departed Hobart, Australia, on 14 January 2017. It tracked south-west for 6 d to the study area, south of 60 S and between 110 and 120 E, where the ship remained for 40 d. The ship returned to port on 3 March 2017 after a 7 d transit north-east. Within the survey area, the ship followed a “mowing-the-lawn” pattern while seafloor mapping, resulting in high-resolution spatial coverage of a relatively small area. The ship was stationary, facing into the wind, for up to 4 h at a time to allow for sediment retrieval. The voyage track, compared to that of the SIPEX-II voyage of 2012, is presented in Fig. 1.

2.2 Measurements

Wind speed, wind direction, and other meteorological parameters were measured from two locations (port and starboard) on a mast approximately 20 m above the Plimsoll line on the foredeck. This is approximately 25 m a.s.l. Meteorological measurements were made at 1 Hz resolution. The 5 min vector mean wind direction and mean wind speed values were calculated from the two meteorological stations and used for analysis. No bias correction has been applied to correct for any impact of the ship structure. The relative position of the anemometers is forward of the ship's superstructure and exhaust stack (Humphries et al., 2021). Therefore, it is expected that when meteorological measurements may have been impacted by the ship's superstructure, the sampled air will carry a ship exhaust signature and have hence been removed by the exhaust filter described below.

The primary sampling inlet, which services both aerosol and greenhouse gas instrumentation, consists of a conic nozzle with an entrance of 41.5 mm diameter, that opens up to a 161.5 mm diameter stainless steel cylinder. The horizontal nozzle is actively directed into the wind with a directional range of 300. From the nozzle, the inlet bends 90 and continues down vertically for approximately 7.5 m (with two 45 bends), penetrating the deck before reaching a custom-designed sampling manifold, where the sample line splits into numerous smaller lines, a substantial bypass flow, and a water trap. The resulting sampling height from this setup is approximately 18.4 m a.s.l., depending on the ship's draft at any time. The primary flow rate of the sampling line is set at 420 ± 15 L min−1.

Inlet losses have not yet been experimentally characterised for the aerosol sampling system aboard the Investigator but are a point of future work for the platform. Theoretical loss calculations performed for this system suggest > 95 % transmission of 10 nm particles through this system and  75 % transmission of 1 nm particles. Reported particle concentrations are uncorrected and therefore represent a lower bound on ambient aerosol population concentration. The present work includes comparison to aerosol concentrations reported by Humphries et al. (2016) taken on board a different research vessel, the Aurora Australis. It is prudent at this stage to note the differing inlet efficiencies for this separate inlet system. An overall inlet transmission efficiency of 0.89 has been reported, generated from a combination of theoretical and experimental characterisation (Humphries et al., 2015).

Number concentrations of in situ aerosols with diameter greater than 3 nm (CN3) were measured using an ultrafine condensation particle counter (UCPC, TSI Model 3776, TSI, Shoreview, MN, USA). Measurements were made at 10 Hz temporal resolution, with 1 Hz averages output by the instrument. Air was sampled at 1.5 L min−1 through the UCPC. Zeros (HEPA-filtered outside air) and flow checks (external volumetric flowmeter) were made every second day during the voyage, with flow calibrations applied to the measurements in post-processing. A software malfunction led to incorrect times being assigned to measurements during the first part of the voyage. It has not proven possible to reconstruct a reliable time stamp on the early measurements, which means that they cannot be compared to other measurements or reliably filtered for the effects of the ship exhaust. This limited usable CN3 measurements to the period from 6 February to the end of the voyage on 4 March.

Aerosol size distributions (mobility diameter) were measured using a scanning mobility particle sizer (GRIMM nano model 5.420 SMPS+C, Ainring, Bavaria, Germany). During this campaign, particles between 8 and 500 nm were sized. Size distributions were measured at 5 min intervals. Comparison to polystyrene latex spheres showed error in size classification of 5 % for particles of 81, 100, and 303 nm diameter. Sample air for both aerosol number concentration and aerosol size distribution measurements was dried using a Nafion drier (Ecotech, Melbourne, VIC, Australia) in a bypass flow.

Cloud condensation nuclei number concentration was measured using a cloud condensation nuclei counter (CCN100, Droplet Measurement Technologies, Longmont, Colorado, USA). CCN at 0.55 % supersaturation (CCN0.55) is reported in this study. Pressure corrections were applied to the data, collected at 1 Hz and reported as 5 min means. The sample flow was 0.5 L min−1.

222Rn (radon) concentration was measured during the voyage using a 700 L dual-flow-loop two-filter radon detector, designed and built by the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation (Lucas Heights, NSW, Australia) (Chambers et al., 2014; Whittlestone and Zahorowski, 1998) with a flow rate of 65–75 L min−1. Calibration occurs on a quasi-monthly basis through radon injections from a Pylon (Ottawa, ON, Canada) 222Rn source (20.62 ± 4 % kBq 226Ra). Rn222 was measured as it can be a useful tracer of terrestrial influence on air masses, particularly in the remote marine environment, and thus provide information on the history of sampled air masses.

Black carbon aerosol and CO2 were also measured as part of the permanent instrumentation aboard the RV Investigator. These measurements were only used for exhaust identification, and therefore these data are not presented or discussed here. Black carbon aerosol measurements were made using a multi-angle absorption photometer (MAAP; model 5012, Thermo Fisher Scientific, Air Quality Instruments, Franklin, MA, USA). Carbon dioxide is measured using a cavity ring-down spectrometer (Picarro model G2301, Picarro Inc., Santa Clara, CA, USA). Further detailed descriptions of these measurements are available elsewhere (Humphries et al., 2021).

Significant periods of the voyage were affected by contamination of the sampled air by the ship's exhaust due to the operational pattern of the ship. An automated exhaust removal procedure was used on the data using an algorithm designed by Humphries et al. (2021), which identifies periods where measurements are likely to be contaminated by the ship platform's own exhaust and can be subsequently removed. Measurements of CN3 and CO2 that were greater than the 5 min median added to 3 times the median absolute deviation or those containing black carbon concentrations greater than 0.07 ng m−3 were flagged as exhaust. Automatically filtered measurements were then manually inspected in conjunction with black carbon and CO2 measurements for signs of contamination and suspect periods removed. This was done in order to eliminate the influence of re-circulated, diluted exhaust.

As the exhaust filter relies on CN3, it is not possible to filter the data for the first part of the voyage in a manner consistent with the rest of the trip. Additionally, to ensure no bias in a comparison of the CN3 number concentrations with the other quantities measured, it was necessary to limit this analysis to the time period of the shortest dataset, CN3 measurements as noted above (6 February until the end of the voyage).

2.3 Back trajectory modelling

Back trajectories presented were calculated using NOAA's HYbrid Single Particle Lagrangian Integrated Trajectory (HYSPLIT) model (Draxler and Hess, 1998). The ERA-Interim reanalysis dataset (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts, 2019) was used to produce trajectories. The lack of meteorological observations at high latitudes means that there is significant uncertainty in the ERA datasets. A path uncertainty of 15 %–30 % of the trajectory travel distance has been previously estimated over the Antarctic continent (Scarchilli et al., 2011). This uncertainty was attributed both to the use of low-resolution meteorological data and numerical uncertainty inherent in the model. Trajectories were calculated for each hour of the voyage, including vertical transport and limited to 72 h to minimise the accumulation of this uncertainty. The end point was set at the ship's location at 20 m a.s.l. (approximate sampling height) for each calculation.

2.4 Data analysis

Data analysis was performed in the programming language “R” (R Core Team, 2017). Code used for analysis and to produce figures included in this publication can be supplied upon request. All measurements used for analysis were resampled to 5 min time resolution. For consistency between figures and statistics reported in text, confidence intervals for all reported values except in modal bin sizes were calculated following McGill et al. (1978), scaling the quotient of the interquartile range and square root of the number of observations. The notch width in all box plots is also calculated using this method. Median concentrations are reported with 95 % confidence intervals (denoted by CI) unless noted otherwise. Reported r values are Pearson correlation coefficients.

3 Results and discussion

In the proceeding sections, categorisation of air masses has been performed using both wind direction and absolute humidity. Following a definition of the borders of the categories, the overall aerosol properties observed during the voyage are presented. Differences in aerosol properties within categories defined by wind direction and absolute humidity are then considered and the implications of the findings discussed.

https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/21/9497/2021/acp-21-9497-2021-f02

Figure 2(a) Wind rose for the entire analysed PCAN voyage (6 February–4 March 2017). (b) Wind rose for wind measurements south of 56.5 S (excluding measurements from the homeward transit to Hobart, Tasmania, the transit category), showing selected sectors. There are three areas demonstrating a higher density of wind measurements, from the WNW (Ferrel, sector: 225–298, width 73), from the SE (polar, sector 99–148, width 49), and from the S (southerly, 148–217, width 69). These sectors, capturing 76 % of available wind measurements, are shaded in blue (Ferrel, 22 %), khaki (southerly, 20 %), and orange (polar, 34 %) respectively. (c) Frequency histogram of wind measurements plotted in 2b with 1 bin size. Ferrel (blue), southerly (khaki), and polar (orange) sectors are highlighted.

Download

3.1 Categorisation by wind direction

Wind direction was the first variable used to categorise measurements as it is central to the definitions of the Ferrel and polar cells (Aguado and Burt, 2015). Figure 2a shows a wind rose of all analysed measurements (6 February to 4 March). Figure 2b shows a wind rose for the period of the analysed measurements as in Fig. 2a, however excluding the ship's transit back to Hobart. The boundary between transit measurements and other categories was selected using wind speed and latitude. Measurements taken north of 56.5 S were classified as “transit” and were associated with high wind speeds.

The return transit to Hobart was dominated by strong winds from the NW (evidenced by the high density of measurements from this direction plotted in Fig. 2a), as expected in the open Southern Ocean at latitudes between the seasonal ice zone and southern Tasmania. The aerosol characteristics of these open-ocean measurements differed from those observed in measurements made within the seasonal ice zone. Transit measurements make up 15 % of the total measurements plotted in Fig. 2a.

In the restricted wind rose (Fig. 2b), there are three areas of increased measurement density, showing the prevalence of both WNW and SE winds during the voyage. These areas agree with those expected from the three-cell model of atmospheric circulation. The southern edge of the Ferrel cell is expected to display a dominant NW wind, and the northern edge of the polar cell is expected to be associated with a dominant SE wind (e.g. Constantin and Johnson, 2021; Laing et al., 2011; Neiburger et al., 1971) . There also exists frequent measurements with a southerly wind, possibly linked to katabatic outflow from the Antarctic continent.

Measurements taken south of 56.5 S were then divided into 1 wind direction bins and a frequency histogram plotted, presented in Fig. 2c. The frequency of wind measurements in each bin was used to create sectors of increased measurement density. Bins which contained greater than 0.2 % of total wind measurements encompassing the highest-density measurement regions were selected for analysis. Three sectors were created, associated with WNW winds and labelled Ferrel (225–298, 73 width, n=1444), SE winds labelled polar (99–148, 49 width, n=2211), along with an additional southerly sector (S, 148–217, width 69, n=1275). These sectors, shaded in Fig. 2b and c, contain 22 %, 34 %, and 20 % of total wind measurements, respectively. Wind direction was variable during the period of the voyage in which the ship was within the seasonal ice zone, indicating periods of influence from both the Ferrel cell and polar cells. Measurements from the southerly sector (148–217) have been classified separately due to the potential influence of katabatic outflow on these measurements (Chambers et al., 2018). These southerly data are assumed to have been influenced chiefly by orographic factors, and therefore any assumption regarding the air mass origin is difficult to make. Analysis of aerosol measurements from the southerly sector suggests influence from both polar and Ferrel categories. Wind measurements not classified as Ferrel, polar, southerly, or transit were assigned “other”. Boxplots of these five classifications are presented in Fig. 4.

A sensitivity analysis was performed on the borders of the Ferrel and polar sectors, and the results of this analysis are presented in the Supplement Table S1. Sectors were shifted 10 closer to 360, 10 closer to 0, symmetrically widened by 20, and symmetrically narrowed by 20. The median CN3 concentration of the selected Ferrel measurements is higher than or equal to each of the shifted Ferrel cell sectors, with all shifted sectors displaying median concentrations between 229 and 265 cm−3. The selected Ferrel sector median CN3 concentration is 265 (CI 252–279) cm−3. Adjusting the polar cell sector introduces more variability in the median CN3 concentration: adjusted sector concentrations range from 534–620 cm−3. The median CN3 concentration of the selected sector, 594 (CI 573–615) cm−3, is in the upper region of this range. Thus, adjusting selection boundaries is expected to cause only small changes in the median particle concentration of the Ferrel and polar cell sectors as a non-uniform particle source was being measured from a moving platform. The relatively small changes observed with shifted sectors demonstrate that the median aerosol statistics reported are robust to boundary changes in selected wind sectors.

3.2 Categorisation by absolute humidity

Using measurements from the same voyage as discussed here, Chambers et al. (2018) found unexpected diurnal variability in radon concentrations during the voyage, which was explained as arising from katabatic outflow events. Events classed as katabatic outflow were associated with higher concentrations of CCN. A mid-morning radon minimum was especially indicative of this type of transport. Antarctic katabatic outflow air masses are often of free tropospheric origin (Chambers et al., 2018; Nylen et al., 2004) and are expected to be drier than those that have extended residence times over the local marine environment. Therefore, absolute humidity (AH) was the second meteorological variable used for categorising aerosol measurements. Categorisations were performed on the same set of measurements used for division by wind direction. Each categorisation (whether by wind or AH) is therefore a subset of the total voyage measurement superset. Wind and AH categories overlap to differing degrees: a summary of overlaps is presented in Table S2.

Absolute humidity was calculated using a derivation of the ideal gas law (Carnotcycle, 2012) from relative humidity (derived from wet- and dry-bulb temperature measurements) and measured ambient temperature using the following equation, where AH is absolute humidity in units of grams per cubic metre (g m−3), T is measured temperature in degrees Celsius, RH is relative humidity expressed as a percentage, MWH2O is the molecular mass of water, and R is the ideal gas constant.

AHg  m-3=6.112e17.67TT+243.5×RH×MWH2O273.15+T×100×R

A frequency histogram, presented in Fig. 3, was constructed from the time series of AH measurements. Examining the distribution allowed three AH categories to be defined. These are defined in the first instance by a local minimum at 4.30 gH2O m−3 in the frequency histogram of AH measurements. Measurements below this threshold were designated as “low AH”. Measurements in the region 4.30–5.75 gH2O m−3 were classified in the “mid AH” category. Finally, measurements above 5.75 gH2O m−3 were classed in the “high AH” category. A total of 45 % (n=3473) of valid AH measurements were classified as low AH, 39 % (n=3028) as mid AH, and 14 % (n=1125) as high AH. The low AH category is expected to capture air masses with either a katabatic flow or free-tropospheric source region as air from these sources has not had an extended residence time in a marine environment. The mid AH is expected to consist largely of marine air masses. Note that the high AH category overlaps almost exclusively (> 99 %) with the transit category as defined above. This overlap is expected for maritime measurements as the water saturation pressure is dependent on temperature and ambient temperature increase during the transit from the Antarctic coast to Tasmania.

https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/21/9497/2021/acp-21-9497-2021-f03

Figure 3Frequency histogram of absolute humidity measurements including absolute humidity categories used for data analysis. The low–mid boundary is at 4.30 gH2O m−3 and the mid–high boundary at 5.75 gH2O m−3.

Download

3.3 General properties of observed aerosol populations

Measurements were made for the entire voyage, but as noted above an instrument malfunction meant CN3 measurements are not available until 6 February 2017. For the period where all measurements are available, the data have been summarised as boxplots (Fig. 4a, b, and c present boxplots of CN3, CCN0.55, and 222Rn). The median CCN0.55 concentration of 167 (CI 158–176) cm−3 implies approximately half the particles measured as CN3 could be activated as CCN (concentration of 354 (CI 344–363) cm−3). The median 222Rn concentration observed during the voyage was 64.5 (CI 62–67) mBq m−3. The low concentrations of both aerosol number and 222Rn suggest that measurements of clean marine air dominated and that the air masses sampled are largely free of terrestrial influence. For comparison, the mean summer CCN0.5 concentration from the Cape Grim “baseline” from measurements taken in the 1990s was reported as 100 cm−3 (Gras, 1995). A similar summer baseline median concentration has been reported from the site more recently (Gras and Keywood, 2017). The Cape Grim baseline sector is specifically selected as being free from terrestrial and anthropogenic influence and thus can be assumed to represent the remote Southern Ocean background signal. The median 222Rn concentration observed in baseline measurements (2001–2008) at Cape Grim was 42 mBq m−3 (Zahorowski et al., 2013). In comparison, the non-baseline median for the same period was 372 mBq m−3, nearly a factor of 10 larger. The low concentration observed in the present study suggests sampled air masses are free from recent terrestrial influence and are representative of Southern Ocean boundary layer conditions. Overall particle number concentration and CCN concentrations reported here are also similar to those reported by Schmale et al. (2019) as CN7 (leg 1 median: 470 cm−3) and CCN0.2 (leg 1 median: 114 cm−3) during the Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition (ACE-SPACE), though the activation ratio observed during ACE-SPACE was lower than that observed during PCAN.

A median size distribution plotted from all valid SMPS measurements for the analysis period during PCAN (Fig. S1) has a bimodal shape indicative of cloud-processed remote marine aerosol populations (Hoppel et al., 1990), with the Hoppel minimum close to 70 nm. An Aitken mode is evident, centred at 38.5 nm. A less concentrated accumulation mode centred at 126 nm is also present. This distribution is similar to that observed in marine polar air masses during a summer voyage close the Antarctic peninsula (Fossum et al., 2018), though smaller in magnitude.

Previous aerosol number concentration measurements in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone suggested the influence of large-scale atmospheric transport on locally observed aerosol concentrations (e.g. Humphries et al., 2021; Alroe et al., 2020). In these PCAN measurements, immediate changes in aerosol number concentration suggestive of an atmospheric boundary at the polar front, measured as CN3 or CCN0.55, were not observed to the extent of previous campaigns in the region (Alroe et al., 2020; Humphries et al., 2016). It must be considered at this point that the polar front describes a feature of climatological atmospheric circulation, which is influenced on a shorter timescale by meteorological conditions. Therefore the strength of this atmospheric boundary is expected to vary over the synoptic timescale. Meteorological variables have been used to place aerosol measurements into the framework of the polar and Ferrel (mid-latitude) cells.

https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/21/9497/2021/acp-21-9497-2021-f04

Figure 4Box plots for all analysed measurements and divided by category for (a), (d), and (g) CN3; (b), (e), and (h) CCN0.55; and (c), (f), and (i) Rn222. Plots in the centre column are split by wind category, and plots in the right-hand column are split by absolute humidity. Notches indicate the 95 % confidence intervals in the median. Black dots represent outliers, defined as points greater than 1.5 times the interquartile ranges distant from the nearest quartile. Medians and confidence intervals for each variable in each category are reported in Table S3.

Download

3.4 Aerosol variables and radon grouped by wind direction

Figure 4 presents box plots of CN3 (Fig. 4d), CCN0.55 (Fig. 4e), and radon concentrations (Fig. 4f) grouped by wind direction. Statistics represented graphically in Fig. 4 are also presented in tabular form in Table S2. In each case the median concentration is higher in polar cell measurements than in Ferrel cell measurements. Median CN3 concentration in the polar cell, 594 (CI 573–615) cm−3, is approximately a factor of 2 larger than the Ferrel cell median, at 263 (CI 250–277) cm−3. Median CCN0.55 concentrations in the polar cell were 208 (CI 176–240) cm−3, compared to a median concentration of 113 (CI 84–142) cm−3 in the Ferrel cell. Median radon concentration in the polar cell was 78.3 (CI 73.3–83.3) mBq m−3 compared to 59.1 (CI 54.3–63.9) mBq m−3 in the Ferrel cell. For both aerosol variables, the transit category median is between those observed in the polar and Ferrel (Fig. 4). The higher median concentrations of CN3 and CCN0.55 observed in the transit category (compared to the Ferrel) are likely due to the increased influence of continental and anthropogenic aerosol sources on boundary layer aerosol populations in the northern latitudes of the Southern Ocean, particularly above 50 S, as reported by Humphries et al. (2021). Measurements reported here as Ferrel cells were taken too far south to be significantly influenced by these additional particle sources.

In the southern sector the median CN3 concentration is 354 (CI 329–379) cm−3, between those observed in the polar and the Ferrel. As discussed in Sect. 3.1, southern measurements are separated from the polar–Ferrel classification in an attempt to isolate the known influence of katabatic outflow on near-coast measurements of boundary layer aerosol in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone (Chambers at el., 2018). It is recognised that identifying katabatic flow by wind direction is not ideal. However, given the context of classifying measurements by wind direction, this method has been used in this study for consistency. The remaining 24 % of measurements of uncertain air mass history, classified as “other”, have a mean CN3 concentration of 250 (CI 240–250) cm−3. This is the lowest median CN3 concentration observed in any category. The lowest median 222Rn concentration was also observed in the “other” classification, suggesting air masses sampled may have sources in the remote atmosphere distant from aerosol precursor sources and continental influence.

Median aerosol size distributions divided by wind sector are presented in Fig. 5a. Each category displays a bimodal distribution. The transit distribution is the most strongly bimodal. This is indicative of heavily cloud-processed marine aerosol (Hoppel et al., 1990) and results in one modal maximum in the Aitken mode (37.2 nm) and the other in the accumulation mode (157 nm). The median magnitudes of the modes are 421 (CI 378–464) and 288 (CI 251–326) cm−3 respectively (Fig. 5a).

In contrast, the distributions plotted for the Ferrel and polar cells differ from the transit period distribution. Both polar and Ferrel distributions contain two local maxima with a smaller degree of bimodality. It should be noted that all aerosol populations, even those potentially descending from the free troposphere, had the potential to be cloud-processed before sampling. Thus, the observed bimodality in all categories is not surprising. The polar air mass has a higher particle concentration across the distribution than the Ferrel (as expected accounting for the larger median CN3 concentration). The difference is relatively uniform across the distribution between 20 and 120 nm. The polar and Ferrel distributions have modes in similar size ranges: the smaller mode in the polar cell has a maximum at 38.5 and at 40 nm in the Ferrel. The larger mode is at a slightly larger diameter in the Ferrel cell dataset (109 nm) than the polar cell (101 nm). Modal sizes and concentrations from Fig. 5 are summarised in Table S3.

Higher particle concentrations in the polar cell have been observed previously in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone. In addition to the spring 2012 campaign SIPEXII (Humphries et al., 2016) and identification of katabatic influence on local CCN concentration (Chambers et al., 2018) referred to previously, there is evidence for a change in aerosol population across the polar front during a summer latitudinal transect of the Southern Ocean in 2016 (Alroe et al., 2020), along with variability in the Aitken mode dependant on marine biological precursors and synoptic-scale systems. Accumulation-mode peaks in both the Ferrel and polar median size distributions are less concentrated than in the Aitken mode.

These particle concentration characteristics contrast with observations made by Schmale et al. (2019) in the West Antarctic sector of the Southern Ocean. Using k-means clustering, they observed two clusters of aerosol size distribution clusters with different air mass histories. Cluster 1 was indicative of extended residence in the Southern Ocean marine boundary layer (similar to the Ferrel category identified here), while the other, cluster 2, showed influence of descent over the Antarctic continent and polynya regions. The modal sizes of cluster 1 distribution are larger than those observed in the present Ferrel measurements. The same is true when comparing the cluster 2 distribution to the present polar distribution. This information, coupled with the more concentrated accumulation mode observed by Schmale et al. (2019), suggests the particle populations observed during PCAN may have different air mass histories than those observed in the West Antarctic. There is evidence for differing aerosol regimes near the East and West Antarctic coasts in the differences in observed particle concentrations and activation ratios during the 2016–2017 austral summer (Schmale et al., 2019).

To further characterise the observed size distributions, the modal sizes were determined. That is, the size bin with the highest median concentration in the Aitken and accumulation size range is selected as the mode. To estimate the uncertainty in the modal particle size for Aitken- and accumulation-mode aerosol, the bin with maximum concentration was retrieved from each individual distribution and analysed. Details of this analysis are found in the Supplement Sect. S1. These results, summarised in Table S4, are different to the modal bin sizes retrieved for the overall median distributions noted above. This is a result of the distributions changing as concentrations change. While significant differences between the modal size bins do exist between categories when calculating the uncertainty using this method, these differences are small in magnitude (less than 12 nm in each mode between polar and Ferrel and between low and mid AH) for both wind and AH categorisations. It is therefore unclear what conclusions can be drawn from this result. The median modes of individual distributions are plotted with 95 % CI for each category in Fig. 5.

https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/21/9497/2021/acp-21-9497-2021-f05

Figure 5Median particle size distributions for (a) each wind category and (b) each AH category. Shaded areas represent the 95 % confidence interval in the median for each bin size. Note the diameter axis is logarithmic in scale. The modal sizes and concentrations for each distribution are reported in Table S3. Black points plotted on each distribution indicate the median Aitken and accumulation mode generated from analysis of individual size distributions. Error bars represent the 95 % confidence interval. More detail is provided in the Supplement Sect. S1 and Table S4.

Download

3.5 Aerosol variables and radon grouped by absolute humidity

The categorisation by absolute humidity should allow for identification of the impact of katabatic outflow on the aerosol population. Figure 4 displays boxplots of CN3, CCN0.55, and radon concentrations grouped by absolute humidity category. Measurements of CN3 and CCN0.55 in the low AH category are higher than those in the mid and high AH categories. Median CN3 and CCN0.55 concentrations in the low AH category were 507 (CI 489–526) cm−3 and 228 (CI 201–255) cm−3 respectively. In comparison, the mid AH medians for CN3 and CCN0.55 were 284 (CI 276–292) cm−3 and 117 (CI 107–128) cm−3, respectively. This is consistent with the finding that katabatic outflow events are associated with higher aerosol concentrations than locally sampled air masses observed by Chambers et al. (2018), as katabatic outflow events are likely included in the low AH category due to the dry nature of katabatic air masses. While not statistically significant, a difference in radon concentration is also noted between the categories: a median of 68.1 (CI 64.0–72.1) mBq m−3 in during low AH compared to 63.6 (CI 60.3–66.9) mBq m−3 during mid AH. It is likely that the low AH category captures the katabatic outflow present in type 3 and type 4 days presented in Chambers et al. (2018). Type 4 days were defined by Chambers et al. (2018) using a mid-morning Rn222 minimum, daytime winds from the S/SW, and relatively strong winds, indicative of air masses strongly influenced by katabatic outflow. Type 3 days shared similar characteristics to type 4 days, though to a lesser extent. The median CCN0.55 concentration observed in the present analysis for low AH agrees well with maximum CCN concentrations reported for mid-morning katabatic outflow (type 3 and 4 days) CCN peaks (Chambers et al., 2018). It should be noted that the low AH category includes a greater percentage of the measurements (45 %) compared to the type 3 and 4 days reported by Chambers et al. (2018) ( 27 %) so likely includes measurements not influenced by katabatic drainage.

Median size distributions plotted for each AH category are presented in Fig. 5b. As noted earlier, the high AH category is also the transit category and hence a measurement of open-ocean Ferrel cell aerosol. Similar to Fig. 5a, each distribution shows bimodal character. The low AH and mid AH have a smaller magnitude of bimodality as there is a smaller concentration difference between modes and the Hoppel minimum compared to the transit distribution. The smaller mode in each of these distributions, in the Aitken range, is similar in magnitude and concentration: at 38.5 nm with a concentration of 230 (CI 193–266) cm−3 in low AH and at 40.0 nm a concentration of 221 (CI 194–249) cm−3 in mid AH. The larger mode is more concentrated in the low AH category, with a concentration of 214 (CI 189–240) cm−3 at 106 nm, than the mid AH: a concentration of 148 (CI 125–171) cm−3 at 113 nm. The significance of the results presented above will be discussed in the following paragraphs.

3.6 Evidence for large-scale atmospheric transport influence on Southern Ocean aerosol populations

Differences in CN3 and CCN0.55 concentration are evident when meteorological variables are used to group aerosol measurements. Grouping measurements by wind direction produces higher median concentrations of CN3 and CCN sampled during wind directions indicative of polar cell air. Similarly, higher concentrations of CN3 and CCN0.55 were observed when AH is less than 4.3 gH2O m−3. The southerly and polar cell air is expected to be drier than Ferrel cell air (which has a theoretically longer residence time in the marine boundary layer as well as having increased contact with warmer ocean water). These results provide evidence that large-scale atmospheric transport (i.e. the atmospheric transport included in the polar and Ferrel cells) influences local aerosol populations in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone. Note, however, that the aerosol size distributions sampled under different wind and AH regimes are similar. The aerosol size distributions are also similar between polar and Ferrel wind measurements. The similarity between these median size distributions, as depicted in Fig. 5, suggests that a common aerosol source may contribute to these populations.

Back trajectory analysis can be used to further identify influence of large-scale atmospheric processes on boundary layer aerosol in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone. HYSPLIT back trajectories were run for each hour, on the hour, of the voyage. The ship's location at each time was used as the trajectory end point. Trajectories were separated into wind and absolute humidity categories using a similar method to that used for the aerosol measurements. The classification category for the wind direction or AH at the trajectory endpoint was used to classify the trajectory. Median vertical profiles, frequency histograms, and trajectory maps for each category were constructed and are presented in Figs. S2 and S3.

Distinct air mass histories are expected to contribute to different aerosol population characteristics observed in each classification. Back trajectory analysis suggests a greater free tropospheric influence is present in the polar wind category compared to the Ferrel wind category. The boundary layer height in this region of the Southern Ocean has been measured to be 900 ± 400 m north of the polar front and 700 ± 200 m south of the polar front during summer and early autumn voyages (Alexander and Protat, 2019). The median profile for the polar category shows air masses residing above 1000 m a.g.l. 48 h before the trajectory endpoint. Sampled air masses in the polar category are therefore likely to have significant free-tropospheric influence. The median profiles for the Ferrel and transit wind categories show no such development, instead keeping close to the surface for the duration of the 72 h modelled (Fig. S2). The large interquartile ranges on this plot reflect significant variability in air mass altitude. Interestingly, the trajectories for the southerly category also show history of descending air masses.

A similar result is generated when examining trajectories grouped by AH category. The mid and high AH category median trajectory vertical profiles show little vertical development in the 72 h prior to measurement (Fig. S3). In contrast, the low AH category median vertical profile demonstrates vertical development comparable to that of the polar wind category, with significant residence time at free-tropospheric altitudes in the 72 h prior to sampling.

Back trajectories indicate a greater free tropospheric influence on air masses sampled under polar wind regimes and with low AH than during other measurement periods. Higher particle counts (CN3 and CCN0.55) are also observed in these air masses. Observation of higher aerosol number concentrations and a free tropospheric influence on air masses sampled in the polar cell in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone are common to the summer measurements presented here and the spring 2012 measurements reported in Humphries et al. (2016). However, there are some key differences between measurements, suggesting different source and air mass transport mechanisms.

3.7 Evidence for seasonality in seasonal ice zone regional aerosol sources

Comparing SIPEXII polar cell aerosol measurements from spring 2012 to the PCAN polar measurements (classified by wind direction) indicates there may be different sources, or source strengths, for aerosol populations observed in spring and summer despite some similar characteristics. Humphries et al. (2016) defined polar cell measurements using a clear change in observed aerosol population along with detailed back trajectory analysis. This method is different to that used here. However, the persistent nature of dominant surface winds associated with polar and Ferrel cells, coupled with back trajectories (plotted in Figs. S2 and S3) aligning with those modelled for SIPEXII measurements, allows comparison between polar cell measurements to be made between the voyages. The median CN3 concentration in the polar cell during SIPEXII was 816 cm−3 (Humphries et al., 2016), compared to a median polar CN3 concentration of 594 cm−3 reported here. The median SIPEXII Ferrel cell concentration was 196 cm−3, compared to a median of 263 cm−3 during PCAN. The magnitude of the change between the polar and Ferrel cell during SIPEXII was a factor of approximately 4, whereas for PCAN this change is closer to a factor of 2. It is important to note that these measurements were taken from different platforms, and therefore different particle inlet transmission efficiencies must be considered. However, the difference in the magnitude of enhancement observed in the polar cell, which does not depend on inlet transmission efficiency in both voyages, demonstrates that there is a robust difference in aerosol populations observed between voyages.

A further difference between spring and summer measurements becomes evident when considering the size of particle populations measured during the voyages. The Ferrel–polar cell transition during SIPEXII was especially prominent in the CN3−10 fraction, with the median CN3−10 concentration in the Ferrel cell reported at 45 cm−3 compared to a median of 776 cm−3 in the polar cell. This is attributed to a change of aerosol source by Humphries et al. (2016). A lack of a CN10 measurement on board during PCAN (due to instrument malfunctions) prevents a direct comparison of this metric between voyages. Aerosol size distribution measurements from PCAN can be used however: the SMPS instrument used on this voyage observed measurements as small as 8 nm diameter during the voyage, allowing the particle concentration to be calculated in the CN3−8 range. During PCAN, the median CN3−8 concentration in the Ferrel cell was 118 cm−3, compared to 148 cm−3 in the polar cell. This suggests the difference in aerosol number concentration observed during PCAN is not driven by a large change in concentration of very small particles as observed during SIPEXII.

Polar cell measurements from SIPEXII and PCAN (defined by wind direction) were compared to investigate this further. Figure 6 displays four correlation plots: AH measurements and atmospheric pressure measurements from PCAN (top row) and SIPEXII (bottom row) are plotted against CN3 measurements. Events of anomalously high CN3 concentration during SIPEXII as identified by Humphries et al. (2016) are excluded from this analysis. CN3 shows a negative relationship with absolute humidity in PCAN polar cell measurements (r=-0.50). This relationship is weaker for SIPEXII measurements (r=-0.26). In contrast, a negative relationship is observed between SIPEXII polar cell CN3 measurements and atmospheric pressure (r=-0.61), discussed in detail in Humphries et al. (2016). This relationship is weaker in the PCAN polar cell measurements (r=-0.23). This suggests the source regions or mechanisms of measured polar cell aerosol in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone may vary between seasons. A free tropospheric injection model presented by Humphries et al. (2016), associated with events of local low atmospheric pressure, was used to account for unexpectedly high concentrations of small aerosol during SIPEXII. This tropospheric injection may not be the dominant source of polar cell aerosol measured during summer 2017. This conclusion was also drawn from the analysis of radon diurnal cycles and CCN concentrations from the PCAN voyage (Chambers et al., 2018), which highlighted the contribution of katabatic outflow to the aerosol populations of the near-shore atmosphere of the East Antarctic.

https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/21/9497/2021/acp-21-9497-2021-f06

Figure 6Comparison of PCAN (a, b) and SIPEXII (c, d) AH and atmospheric sea level pressure measurements plotted against CN3 measurements in the polar cell. Linear regression lines are plotted on the stronger relationship for each voyage. Pearson's r values are plotted in each panel.

Download

3.8 Explaining the observed seasonality

Higher concentrations of aerosol number concentration (expressed as CN3, CN10, or CCN) are observed in the polar-cell-influenced air masses in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone during both spring and summer compared with Ferrel cell air masses. However, the magnitude of this change is different between seasons. Though a direct comparison cannot be made, size-resolved measurements suggest different size distributions between voyages. Therefore, it seems different source and transport mechanisms may influence polar cell aerosol populations in the seasonal ice zone in spring and summer.

During spring, the circumpolar trough (an alternative name for the polar front), the region of low pressure surrounding the Antarctic continent, is at peak intensity and located closest to the Antarctic coast (Pook, 2002). This serves to strengthen westerly winds in the southern Ferrel cell and intensify the pressure gradient across the trough. This may be associated with limited atmospheric transport across the polar front. This could cause the polar and Ferrel cells to be more isolated from each other, creating a “boundary” observable in aerosol populations. Stronger low-pressure systems are present in the region in spring (evidenced by the lower atmospheric pressures measured during SIPEXII compared to PCAN, Fig. 6) compared to summer. These strong low-pressure events inject CN3 into the polar cell boundary layer from the free troposphere (Humphries et al., 2016), causing the correlation between atmospheric pressure and CN3 concentration observed in the SIPEXII measurements.

The circumpolar trough weakens in summer (Pook, 2002). This may allow for more inter-cell atmospheric transport between the polar and Ferrel cells. A lack of clear boundary observable in aerosol populations in PCAN measurements between the cells could be symptomatic of this, as are similar median aerosol size distributions for measurements classified as polar cell and Ferrel cell. Low-pressure systems in the region are generally weaker in summer, and therefore the free tropospheric injection of small particles could be less dominant in the polar cell. Instead, increased influence of the katabatic outflow on measurements in the polar cell documented by Chambers et al. (2018) is observed and strengthens the relationship between CN3 concentration and AH. It is recognised that katabatic outflow from the Antarctic continent has an annual minimum in summer (Parish and Cassano, 2003). However, during periods of limited insolation, downslope drainage driven by latent cooling still occurs during the summer months, especially in the high-wind East Antarctic (e.g. Yu et al., 2020; Chambers et al., 2018). It must also be considered that differences in tropospheric radon at coastal Antarctic stations between summer and winter provide evidence for seasonality in the impact of recent terrestrial influence on the remote Southern Ocean boundary layer (Chambers et al., 2018).

It is clearly possible, however, to have periods in any season with strong low-pressure systems, and so this hypothesis requires testing over varying meteorological conditions. Other mechanisms of air mass exchange between the boundary layer and free troposphere also exist, including boundary layer turbulence (e.g. Zhang et al., 2018; Driedonks and Tennekes, 1984). The extent to which the entrainment of free tropospheric air into the marine boundary layer driven by air mass exchange on a scale smaller than the synoptic is also a question requiring more extended measurements in the region to answer. Results from a more recent summer voyage do observe distinct changes in aerosol properties when crossing the polar front (Humphries et al., 2021), demonstrating the complexity of the region.

A further difference between the seasons is the strength of aerosol sources. Phytoplankton blooms are known to occur around Antarctica in late spring and summer, which can act as an additional particle source via the production of aerosol precursor gases (Charlson et al., 1987). Increased organic fractions in summer Antarctic aerosol observations provide evidence for this mechanism (Hong et al., 2020). Concentrations of biogenic aerosol precursors are particularly high during periods of sea ice melt in the spring (Yan et al., 2020; Gabric et al., 2018), which may contribute to increased secondary organic aerosol (SOA) formation during this period. Spring measurements taken during the SIPEXII voyage were taken while significant concentrations of sea ice surrounded the measurement platform, as indicated in the shading in Fig. 1. Very limited sea ice was present in these latitudes during the PCAN voyage. It is important therefore to consider the implications of ice-melt-related algal bloom when comparing spring and summer measurements in the seasonal ice zone. The magnitude of the algal bloom is greatest in the waters off the Antarctic Peninsula but does still occur in the East Antarctic (Deppeler and Davidson, 2017). The influence of phytoplankton blooms on ultrafine aerosol has been observed in this region before. Alroe et al. (2020) measured enhancements in Aitken- and nucleation-mode aerosol in the Southern Ocean off East Antarctica, associated with air mass back trajectories passing over biologically productive regions. The annual cycle of this particle precursor source must therefore be considered when examining aerosol populations of the region.

4 Conclusions

Measurements of aerosol number concentration and aerosol size distribution have been reported here from the infrequently measured seasonal ice zone of East Antarctica. Total particle concentrations as CN3 observed during the present summer voyage are similar to those observed elsewhere around the Antarctic continent. Cloud condensation nuclei concentrations are also similar here to those observed previously, both from ship-based measurement campaigns and terrestrial stations situated at more northern latitudes. Particle size distributions indicated the majority of measurements were influenced by cloud processing to some extent.

This work provides more evidence for the growing body of literature suggesting that large-scale atmospheric transport processes influence the aerosol concentrations observed in the boundary layer of the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone. Local winds from the SE, indicative of polar cell air masses, displayed median CN3 and CCN0.55 concentrations much greater than when local wind direction was from the NW (indicative of Ferrel cell air masses). Similarly, aerosol measurements taken during periods where absolute humidity was less than 4.3 gH2O m−3 were also associated with enhancements in CN3 and CCN number concentration compared to other periods of the voyage. Unlike previous voyages to this region, obvious changes in aerosol concentration were not observed when crossing the atmospheric boundary at the polar front.

Evidence of seasonal differences of aerosol measurements in the polar cell also emerges when comparing summer to spring measurements. Differing relationships between CN3, atmospheric pressure, and absolute humidity indicate that sampled aerosol populations may have modified source regions or mechanisms.

Seasonal differences in aerosol populations observed in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone may be explained using the following conceptual model. The distinct boundary in atmospheric composition observed during spring measurements may be a result of a strengthened circumpolar trough, isolating the air masses of the Ferrel and polar cells. Polar cell aerosol populations are driven by tropospheric injection of ultrafine particles into the boundary later. In contrast, the summer in this region generally exhibits a weakened circumpolar trough. This weakening would allow for a greater air mass transfer between the Ferrel and polar cells and weaken the atmospheric boundary defined by sampled aerosol population. The reduction in strength of the Ferrel cell–polar cell atmospheric boundary could reduce the difference between the two air masses' aerosol populations. Synoptic low-pressure systems could be expected to occasionally inject ultrafine particles from the free troposphere into the marine boundary layer. This may occur more frequently in spring due to more frequent, stronger synoptic systems. This case is not observed in the present measurements. Instead, katabatic outflow from the Antarctic continent more strongly influences particle number concentration enhancement.

This work provides evidence for a variability of tropospheric aerosol populations between seasons in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone. Measurements of air mass movements on the mesoscale such as a wind profiling boundary layer radar would also be of use in seeking to confirm source regions of sampled aerosol populations and distinguishing air mass movements on a scale finer than that detected by models. Greater understanding could be gained from measurement campaigns with durations longer than the synoptic timescale as the discussed processes have an influence on a regional, rather than local, spatial scale. Increased density of aerosol observations throughout the year, including additional campaigns in summer and spring, would also assist in understanding the complex factors driving aerosol populations in the troposphere of the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone and in other locations surrounding the Antarctic coast.

Code availability

Software code in the R language used in generating the present paper is available from the corresponding author upon request. All data and samples acquired on the voyage are made publicly available in accordance with MNF policy. Measurements are available through the CSIRO Data Access Portal at the following link: https://doi.org/10.25919/xs0b-an24 (last access: 2 June 2021, Humphries et al., 2020).

Supplement

The supplement related to this article is available online at: https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-9497-2021-supplement.

Author contributions

RSH instigated the PCAN investigation, along with JPW and MDK, and coordinated deployment. JBS was responsible for onboard data collection, data analysis, and manuscript preparation. RSH and SRW provided scientific advice, data analysis expertise, and manuscript preparation guidance. SDC, ADG, and AGW installed and maintain the radon monitor on board the RV Investigator. IMM was responsible for the installation of many aerosol instruments on the Investigator. SG ran the offline HYSPLIT model. All authors contributed to reviews of the manuscript.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgements

The authors gratefully acknowledge Leanne Armand, the chief scientist on board voyage IN2017-V01, and other voyage staff for allowing the PCAN piggyback project on board the RV Investigator. The authors wish to thank the CSIRO Marine National Facility (MNF) for its support in the form of sea time on RV Investigator, support personnel, scientific equipment, and data management with particular thanks to the Seagoing Instrumentation Team. In particular we thank the technical and IT support personnel on board the voyage. All data and samples acquired on the voyage are made publicly available in accordance with MNF policy. This project received grant funding from the Australian Government as part of the Antarctic Science Collaboration Initiative program. The Australian Antarctic Program Partnership is led by the University of Tasmania and includes the Australian Antarctic Division, CSIRO Oceans and Atmosphere, Geoscience Australia, the Bureau of Meteorology, the Tasmanian State Government, and Australia's Integrated Marine Observing System.

Review statement

This paper was edited by Lynn M. Russell and reviewed by three anonymous referees.

References

Aguado, E. and Burt, J. E.: Atmospheric Circulation and Pressure Distributions, in: Understanding Weather and Climate, Pearson, London, UK, 565 pp., 2015. 

Alexander, S. P. and Protat, A.: Vertical Profiling of Aerosols With a Combined Raman-Elastic Backscatter Lidar in the Remote Southern Ocean Marine Boundary Layer (43–66 S, 132–150 E), J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 124, 12107–12125, https://doi.org/10.1029/2019jd030628, 2019. 

Alroe, J., Cravigan, L. T., Miljevic, B., Johnson, G. R., Selleck, P., Humphries, R. S., Keywood, M. D., Chambers, S. D., Williams, A. G., and Ristovski, Z. D.: Marine productivity and synoptic meteorology drive summer-time variability in Southern Ocean aerosols, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 20, 8047–8062, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-8047-2020, 2020. 

Atkinson, H. M., Huang, R.-J., Chance, R., Roscoe, H. K., Hughes, C., Davison, B., Schönhardt, A., Mahajan, A. S., Saiz-Lopez, A., Hoffmann, T., and Liss, P. S.: Iodine emissions from the sea ice of the Weddell Sea, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 12, 11229–11244, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-12-11229-2012, 2012. 

Ayers, G. P. and Gras, J. L.: Seasonal relationship between cloud condensation nuclei and aerosol methanesulphonate in marine air, Nature, 353, 834–835, https://doi.org/10.1038/353834a0, 1991. 

Brechtel, F. J., Kreidenweis, S. M., and Swan, H. B.: Air mass characteristics, aerosol particle number concentrations, and number size distributions at Macquarie Island during the First Aerosol Characterization Experiment (ACE 1), J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 103, 16351–16367, https://doi.org/10.1029/97JD03014, 1998. 

Carnotcycle: How to convert relative humidity to absolute humidity: https://carnotcycle.wordpress.com/2012/08/04/how-to-convert-relative-humidity-to-absolute-humidity/, last access: 7 July 2020. 

Carslaw, K. S., Lee, L. A., Reddington, C. L., Pringle, K. J., Rap, A., Forster, P. M., Mann, G. W., Spracklen, D. V., Woodhouse, M. T., Regayre, L. A., and Pierce, J. R.: Large contribution of natural aerosols to uncertainty in indirect forcing, Nature, 503, 67–71, https://doi.org/10.1038/nature12674, 2013. 

Carslaw, K. S., Gordon, H., Hamilton, D. S., Johnson, J. S., Regayre, L. A., Yoshioka, M., and Pringle, K. J.: Aerosols in the Pre-industrial Atmosphere, Current Climate Change Reports, 3, 1–15, https://doi.org/10.1007/s40641-017-0061-2, 2017. 

Chambers, S. D., Hong, S.-B., Williams, A. G., Crawford, J., Griffiths, A. D., and Park, S.-J.: Characterising terrestrial influences on Antarctic air masses using Radon-222 measurements at King George Island, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 14, 9903–9916, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-14-9903-2014, 2014. 

Chambers, S. D., Preunkert, S., Weller, R., Hong, S.-B., Humphries, R. S., Tositti, L., Angot, H., Legrand, M., Williams, A. G., Griffiths, A. D., Crawford, J., Simmons, J., Choi, T. J., Krummel, P. B., Molloy, S., Loh, Z., Galbally, I., Wilson, S., Magand, O., Sprovieri, F., Pirrone, N., and Dommergue, A.: Characterizing Atmospheric Transport Pathways to Antarctica and the Remote Southern Ocean Using Radon-222, Front. Earth Sci., 6, 190, https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2018.00190, 2018. 

Charlson, R. J., Lovelock, J. E., Andreae, M. O., and Warren, S. G.: Oceanic phytoplankton, atmospheric sulphur, cloud albedo and climate, Nature, 326, 655–661, https://doi.org/10.1038/326655a0, 1987. 

Constantin, A. and Johnson, R. S.: On the modelling of large-scale atmospheric flow, Journal of Differential Equations, 285, 751–798, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jde.2021.03.019, 2021. 

Dall'Osto, M., Ovadnevaite, J., Paglione, M., Beddows, D. C. S., Ceburnis, D., Cree, C., Cortés, P., Zamanillo, M., Nunes, S. O., Pérez, G. L., Ortega-Retuerta, E., Emelianov, M., Vaqué, D., Marrasé, C., Estrada, M., Sala, M. M., Vidal, M., Fitzsimons, M. F., Beale, R., Airs, R., Rinaldi, M., Decesari, S., Cristina Facchini, M., Harrison, R. M., O'Dowd, C., and Simó, R.: Antarctic sea ice region as a source of biogenic organic nitrogen in aerosols, Sci. Rep. UK, 7, 6047, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-06188-x, 2017. 

Davison, B., O'Dowd, C., Hewitt, C. N., Smith, M. H., Harrison, R. M., Peel, D. A., Wolf, E., Mulvaney, R., Schwikowski, M., and Baltensperger, U.: Dimethyl sulfide and its oxidation products in the atmosphere of the Atlantic and southern oceans, Atmos. Environ., 30, 1895–1906, https://doi.org/10.1016/1352-2310(95)00428-9, 1996. 

Deppeler, S. L. and Davidson, A. T.: Southern Ocean Phytoplankton in a Changing Climate, Front. Mar. Sci., 4, 40, https://doi.org/10.3389/fmars.2017.00040, 2017. 

Draxler, R. R. and Hess, G. D.: An overview of the HYSPLIT_4 modelling system for trajectories, dispersion and deposition, Aust. Meteorol. Mag., 47, 295–308, 1998. 

Driedonks, A. and Tennekes, H.: Entrainment effects in the well-mixed atmospheric boundary layer, Bound.-Lay. Meteorol., 30, 75–105, 1984. 

ERA-Interim: https://www.ecmwf.int/en/forecasts/datasets/reanalysis-datasets/era-interim, last access: 25 March 2019. 

Fossum, K. N., Ovadnevaite, J., Ceburnis, D., Dall'Osto, M., Marullo, S., Bellacicco, M., Simó, R., Liu, D., Flynn, M., Zuend, A., and O'Dowd, C.: Summertime Primary and Secondary Contributions to Southern Ocean Cloud Condensation Nuclei, Sci. Rep., 8, 13844, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-32047-4, 2018. 

Gabric, A., Matrai, P., Jones, G., and Middleton, J.: The Nexus between Sea Ice and Polar Emissions of Marine Biogenic Aerosols, B. Am. Meteorol. Soc., 99, 61–81, https://doi.org/10.1175/bams-d-16-0254.1, 2018. 

Gras, J. L.: CN, CCN and particle size in Southern Ocean air at Cape Grim, Atmos. Res., 35, 233–251, https://doi.org/10.1016/0169-8095(94)00021-5, 1995. 

Gras, J. L. and Keywood, M.: Cloud condensation nuclei over the Southern Ocean: wind dependence and seasonal cycles, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 17, 4419–4432, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-4419-2017, 2017. 

Hong, S.-B., Yoon, Y. J., Becagli, S., Gim, Y., Chambers, S. D., Park, K.-T., Park, S.-J., Traversi, R., Severi, M., Vitale, V., Kim, J.-H., Jang, E., Crawford, J., and Griffiths, A. D.: Seasonality of aerosol chemical composition at King Sejong Station (Antarctic Peninsula) in 2013, Atmos. Environ., 223, 117185, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atmosenv.2019.117185, 2020. 

Hoppel, W. A., Fitzgerald, J. W., Frick, G. M., Larson, R. E., and Mack, E. J.: Aerosol size distributions and optical properties found in the marine boundary layer over the Atlantic Ocean, J. Geophys. Res., 95, 3659–3686, https://doi.org/10.1029/JD095iD04p03659, 1990. 

Humphries, R. S., Schofield, R., Keywood, M. D., Ward, J., Pierce, J. R., Gionfriddo, C. M., Tate, M. T., Krabbenhoft, D. P., Galbally, I. E., Molloy, S. B., Klekociuk, A. R., Johnston, P. V., Kreher, K., Thomas, A. J., Robinson, A. D., Harris, N. R. P., Johnson, R., and Wilson, S. R.: Boundary layer new particle formation over East Antarctic sea ice – possible Hg-driven nucleation?, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 15, 13339–13364, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-15-13339-2015, 2015. 

Humphries, R. S., Klekociuk, A. R., Schofield, R., Keywood, M., Ward, J., and Wilson, S. R.: Unexpectedly high ultrafine aerosol concentrations above East Antarctic sea ice, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 16, 2185–2206, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-16-2185-2016, 2016. 

Humphries, R. S., McRobert, I. M., Ponsonby, W. A., Ward, J. P., Keywood, M. D., Loh, Z. M., Krummel, P. B., and Harnwell, J.: Identification of platform exhaust on the RV Investigator, Atmos. Meas. Tech., 12, 3019-3038, 10.5194/amt-12-3019-2019, 2019. 

Humphries, R., Simmons, J. B., McRobert, I., Ward, J., Keywood, M., Chambers, S. D., Griffiths, A. D., Williams, A. G., and Wilson, S. R.: Polar Cell Aerosol Nucleation – atmospheric measurements from the RV Investigator voyage IN2017_V01: https://doi.org/10.25919/xs0b-an24 (last access: 2 June 2021), 2020. 

Humphries, R. S., Keywood, M. D., Gribben, S., McRobert, I. M., Ward, J. P., Selleck, P., Taylor, S., Harnwell, J., Flynn, C., Kulkarni, G. R., Mace, G. G., Protat, A., Alexander, S. P., and McFarquhar, G.: Southern Ocean latitudinal gradients of Cloud Condensation Nuclei, Atmos. Chem. Phys. Discuss. [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-2020-1246, in review, 2021. 

Hyder, P., Edwards, J. M., Allan, R. P., Hewitt, H. T., Bracegirdle, T. J., Gregory, J. M., Wood, R. A., Meijers, A. J. S., Mulcahy, J., Field, P., Furtado, K., Bodas-Salcedo, A., Williams, K. D., Copsey, D., Josey, S. A., Liu, C., Roberts, C. D., Sanchez, C., Ridley, J., Thorpe, L., Hardiman, S. C., Mayer, M., Berry, D. I., and Belcher, S. E.: Critical Southern Ocean climate model biases traced to atmospheric model cloud errors, Nat. Commun., 9, 3625, https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-05634-2, 2018. 

Kay, J. E., Wall, C., Yettella, V., Medeiros, B., Hannay, C., Caldwell, P., and Bitz, C.: Global Climate Impacts of Fixing the Southern Ocean Shortwave Radiation Bias in the Community Earth System Model (CESM), J. Climate, 29, 4617–4636, https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-15-0358.1, 2016. 

Laing, A. E. and Evans, J.-L.: Chapter 3: Global Circulation, in: Introduction to Tropical Meteorology, 2 Edn., edited by: Laing, A. E. and Evans, J.-L., University Corporation for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, available at: http://ftp.comet.ucar.edu/memory-stick/tropical/textbook_2nd_edition/navmenu.php_tab_4.htm, last access: 16 June 2021. 

Law, C. S., Smith, M. J., Harvey, M. J., Bell, T. G., Cravigan, L. T., Elliott, F. C., Lawson, S. J., Lizotte, M., Marriner, A., McGregor, J., Ristovski, Z., Safi, K. A., Saltzman, E. S., Vaattovaara, P., and Walker, C. F.: Overview and preliminary results of the Surface Ocean Aerosol Production (SOAP) campaign, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 17, 13645–13667, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-13645-2017, 2017. 

Legrand, M., Yang, X., Preunkert, S., and Theys, N.: Year-round records of sea salt, gaseous, and particulate inorganic bromine in the atmospheric boundary layer at coastal (Dumont d'urville) and central (concordia) East Antarctic sites, J. Geophys. Res., 121, 997–1023, https://doi.org/10.1002/2015JD024066, 2016. 

McCoy, I. L., McCoy, D. T., Wood, R., Regayre, L., Watson-Parris, D., Grosvenor, D. P., Mulcahy, J. P., Hu, Y., Bender, F. A.-M., Field, P. R., Carslaw, K. S., and Gordon, H.: The hemispheric contrast in cloud microphysical properties constrains aerosol forcing, P. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 117, 18998–19006, https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1922502117, 2020. 

McGill, R., Tukey, J. W., and Larsen, W. A.: Variations of Box Plots, The American Statistician, 32, 12–16, https://doi.org/10.2307/2683468, 1978. 

Myhre, G., D. Shindell, F.-M. Bréon, W. Collins, J. Fuglestvedt, J. Huang, D. Koch, J.-F. Lamarque, D. Lee, B. Mendoza, T. Nakajima, A. Robock, G. Stephens, T. Takemura, H. Zhang.: Anthropogenic and Natural Radiative Forcing., in: Climate Change 2013: The Physical Science Basis. Contribution of Working Group I to the Fifth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, edited by: Stocker, T. F., Qin, D., Plattner, G.-K., Tignor, M., Allen, S. K., Boschung, J., Nauels, A., Xia, Y., Bex, V., and Midgley, P. M., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom and New York, 

Neiburger, M., Edinger, J. G., and Bonner, W. D.: Understanding Our Atmospheric Environment, W. H. Freeman and Company, San Fransisco, USA, 304 pp., 1971. 

Nylen, T. H., Fountain, A. G., and Doran, P. T.: Climatology of katabatic winds in the McMurdo dry valleys, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica, J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 109, D3, https://doi.org/10.1029/2003jd003937, 2004. 

O'Dowd, C. D., Lowe, J. A., Smith, M. H., Davison, B., Hewitt, C. N., and Harrison, R. M.: Biogenic Sulphur Emissions and Inferred Non-Sea-Salt-Sulphate Cloud Condensation Nuclei in and around Antarctica, J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 102, 12839–12854, https://doi.org/10.1029/96jd02749, 1997. 

Parish, T. R. and Cassano, J. J.: The Role of Katabatic Winds on the Antarctic Surface Wind Regime, Mon. Weather Rev., 131, 317–333, https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0493(2003)131<0317:Trokwo>2.0.Co;2, 2003. 

Penner, J. E., Zhou, C., and Xu, L.: Consistent estimates from satellites and models for the first aerosol indirect forcing, Geophys. Res. Lett., 39, 13, https://doi.org/10.1029/2012GL051870, 2012. 

Pook, M.: The Roaring Forties sometimes purr, in: Australian Antarctic Magazine, 4, Australian Antarctic Division, Hobart, https://www.antarctica.gov.au/magazine/issue-4-spring-2002/feature2/the-roaring-forties-sometimes-purr/ (last access: 15 June 2021), 2002. 

Quinn, P. K., Coffman, D. J., Kapustin, V. N., Bates, T. S., and Covert, D. S.: Aerosol optical properties in the marine boundary layer during the First Aerosol Characterization Experiment (ACE 1) and the underlying chemical and physical aerosol properties, J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 103, 16547–16563, https://doi.org/10.1029/97jd02345, 1998. 

R Core Team: R: A language and environmental for statisitical computing, R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria, https://www.R-project.org/, 2020. 

Regayre, L. A., Pringle, K. J., Booth, B. B. B., Lee, L. A., Mann, G. W., Browse, J., Woodhouse, M. T., Rap, A., Reddington, C. L., and Carslaw, K. S.: Uncertainty in the magnitude of aerosol-cloud radiative forcing over recent decades, Geophys. Res. Lett., 41, 9040–9049, https://doi.org/10.1002/2014GL062029, 2014. 

Regayre, L. A., Schmale, J., Johnson, J. S., Tatzelt, C., Baccarini, A., Henning, S., Yoshioka, M., Stratmann, F., Gysel-Beer, M., Grosvenor, D. P., and Carslaw, K. S.: The value of remote marine aerosol measurements for constraining radiative forcing uncertainty, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 20, 10063–10072, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-20-10063-2020, 2020. 

Revell, L. E., Kremser, S., Hartery, S., Harvey, M., Mulcahy, J. P., Williams, J., Morgenstern, O., McDonald, A. J., Varma, V., Bird, L., and Schuddeboom, A.: The sensitivity of Southern Ocean aerosols and cloud microphysics to sea spray and sulfate aerosol production in the HadGEM3-GA7.1 chemistry–climate model, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 19, 15447–15466, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-19-15447-2019, 2019. 

Rinaldi, M., Decesari, S., Finessi, E., Giulianelli, L., Carbone, C., Fuzzi, S., O'Dowd, C. D., Ceburnis, D., and Facchini, M. C.: Primary and Secondary Organic Marine Aerosol and Oceanic Biological Activity: Recent Results and New Perspectives for Future Studies, Adv. Meteorol., 2010, 310682, https://doi.org/10.1155/2010/310682, 2010. 

Sanchez, K. J., Roberts, G. C., Saliba, G., Russell, L. M., Twohy, C., Reeves, J. M., Humphries, R. S., Keywood, M. D., Ward, J. P., and McRobert, I. M.: Measurement report: Cloud processes and the transport of biological emissions affect southern ocean particle and cloud condensation nuclei concentrations, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 21, 3427–3446, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-3427-2021, 2021. 

Schmale, J., Baccarini, A., Thurnherr, I., Henning, S., Efraim, A., Regayre, L., Bolas, C., Hartmann, M., Welti, A., Lehtipalo, K., Aemisegger, F., Tatzelt, C., Landwehr, S., Modini, R. L., Tummon, F., Johnson, J., Harris, N., Schnaiter, M., Toffoli, A., Derkani, M., Bukowiecki, N., Stratmann, F., Dommen, J., Baltensperger, U., Wernli, H., Rosenfeld, D., Gysel-Beer, M., and Carslaw, K.: Overview of the Antarctic Circumnavigation Expedition: Study of Preindustrial-like Aerosols and Their Climate Effects (ACE-SPACE), B. Am. Meteorol. Soc., 100, 2260–2283, https://doi.org/10.1175/bams-d-18-0187.1, 2019. 

Scarchilli, C., Frezzotti, M., and Ruti, P. M.: Snow precipitation at four ice core sites in East Antarctica: provenance, seasonality and blocking factors, Clim. Dynam., 37, 2107–2125, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00382-010-0946-4, 2011. 

Shaw, G. E.: Antarctic aerosols: A review, Rev. Geophys., 26, 89–112, https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1029/RG026i001p00089, 1988. 

Shindell, D. T., Lamarque, J.-F., Schulz, M., Flanner, M., Jiao, C., Chin, M., Young, P. J., Lee, Y. H., Rotstayn, L., Mahowald, N., Milly, G., Faluvegi, G., Balkanski, Y., Collins, W. J., Conley, A. J., Dalsoren, S., Easter, R., Ghan, S., Horowitz, L., Liu, X., Myhre, G., Nagashima, T., Naik, V., Rumbold, S. T., Skeie, R., Sudo, K., Szopa, S., Takemura, T., Voulgarakis, A., Yoon, J.-H., and Lo, F.: Radiative forcing in the ACCMIP historical and future climate simulations, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 13, 2939–2974, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-13-2939-2013, 2013. 

Whittlestone, S. and Zahorowski, W.: Baseline radon detectors for shipboard use: Development and deployment in the First Aerosol Characterization Experiment (ACE 1), J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 103, 16743–16751, https://doi.org/10.1029/98JD00687, 1998.  

Yan, J., Jung, J., Lin, Q., Zhang, M., Xu, S., and Zhao, S.: Effect of sea ice retreat on marine aerosol emissions in the Southern Ocean, Antarctica, Sci. Total Environ., 745, 140773, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.140773, 2020. 

Yu, L., Zhong, S., and Sun, B.: The Climatology and Trend of Surface Wind Speed over Antarctica and the Southern Ocean and the Implication to Wind Energy Application, Atmosphere, 11, 108 https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos11010108, 2020. 

Zahorowski, W., Griffiths, A. D., Chambers, S. D., Williams, A. G., Law, R. M., Crawford, J., and Werczynski, S.: Constraining annual and seasonal radon-222 flux density from the Southern Ocean using radon-222 concentrations in the boundary layer at Cape Grim, Tellus B, 65, 19622, https://doi.org/10.3402/tellusb.v65i0.19622, 2013. 

Zhang, H., Zhou, X., Zou, J., Wang, W., Xue, L., Ding, Q., Wang, X., Zhang, N., Ding, A., Sun, J., and Wang, W.: A Review on the Methods for Observing the Substance and Energy Exchange between Atmosphere Boundary Layer and Free Troposphere, Atmosphere, 9, 460, https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos9120460, 2018. 

Download
Short summary
Aerosols have a climate forcing effect in the Earth's atmosphere. Few measurements exist of aerosols in the Southern Ocean, a region key to our understanding of this effect. In this study, aerosol measurements from a summer 2017 campaign in the East Antarctic seasonal ice zone are examined. Higher concentrations of aerosols were found in dry air with origins from above the Antarctic continent compared to other periods of the voyage.
Altmetrics
Final-revised paper
Preprint