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Possible climatic implications of high-altitude black carbon emissions

Govardhan, G and Satheesh, SK and Nanjundiah, R and Moorthy, KK and Babu, SS (2017) Possible climatic implications of high-altitude black carbon emissions. In: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 17 (15). pp. 9623-9644.

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-17-9623-2017

Abstract

On account of its strong absorption of solar and terrestrial radiation, black carbon (BC) aerosol is known to impact large-scale systems, such as the Asian monsoon and the Himalayan glaciers, in addition to affecting the thermal structure of the lower atmosphere. While most studies focus on the near-surface abundance and impacts of BC, our study examines the implications of sharp and confined layers of high BC concentration (called elevated BC layers) at altitudes more than 4 km over the Indian region using the online regional chemistry transport model (WRF-Chem) simulations. These elevated BC layers were revealed in the recent in situ measurements using high-altitude balloons carried out on 17 March 2010, 8 January 2011 and 25 April 2011. Our study demonstrates that high-flying aircraft (with emissions from the regionally fine-tuned MACCity inventory) are the most likely cause of these elevated BC layers. Furthermore, we show that such aircraft-emitted BC can be transported to upper tropospheric or lower stratospheric heights (∼17 km) aided by the strong monsoonal convection occurring over the region, which is known to overshoot the tropical tropopause, leading to the injection of tropospheric air mass (along with its constituent aerosols) into the stratosphere. We show observational evidence for such an intrusion of tropospheric BC into the stratosphere over the Indian region using extinction coefficient and particle depolarisation ratio data from CALIOP Lidar on-board the CALIPSO satellite. We hypothesise that such intrusions of BC into the lower stratosphere and its consequent longer residence time in the stratosphere have significant implications for stratospheric ozone, especially considering the already reported ozone-depleting potential of BC.

Item Type: Journal Article
Publication: Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Publisher: Copernicus GmbH
Additional Information: The copyright for this article belongs to Copernicus GmbH.
Keywords: aerosol; altitude; atmospheric transport; balloon observation; black carbon; emission inventory; in situ measurement; ozone depletion, India
Department/Centre: Division of Mechanical Sciences > Divecha Centre for Climate Change
Date Deposited: 19 Jul 2022 05:02
Last Modified: 19 Jul 2022 05:02
URI: https://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/74854

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