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An overview of the Amazonian Aerosol Characterization Experiment 2008 (AMAZE-08)

Martin, S. T. ; Andreae, M. O. ; Althausen, D. ; Artaxo, P. ; Baars, H. ; Borrmann, S. ; Chen, Q. ; Farmer, D. K. ; Guenther, A. and Gunthe, S. S. , et al. (2010) In Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 10(23). p.11415-11438
Abstract
The Amazon Basin provides an excellent environment for studying the sources, transformations, and properties of natural aerosol particles and the resulting links between biological processes and climate. With this framework in mind, the Amazonian Aerosol Characterization Experiment (AMAZE-08), carried out from 7 February to 14 March 2008 during the wet season in the central Amazon Basin, sought to understand the formation, transformations, and cloud-forming properties of fine-and coarse-mode biogenic aerosol particles, especially as related to their effects on cloud activation and regional climate. Special foci included (1) the production mechanisms of secondary organic components at a pristine continental site, including the factors... (More)
The Amazon Basin provides an excellent environment for studying the sources, transformations, and properties of natural aerosol particles and the resulting links between biological processes and climate. With this framework in mind, the Amazonian Aerosol Characterization Experiment (AMAZE-08), carried out from 7 February to 14 March 2008 during the wet season in the central Amazon Basin, sought to understand the formation, transformations, and cloud-forming properties of fine-and coarse-mode biogenic aerosol particles, especially as related to their effects on cloud activation and regional climate. Special foci included (1) the production mechanisms of secondary organic components at a pristine continental site, including the factors regulating their temporal variability, and (2) predicting and understanding the cloud-forming properties of biogenic particles at such a site. In this overview paper, the field site and the instrumentation employed during the campaign are introduced. Observations and findings are reported, including the large-scale context for the campaign, especially as provided by satellite observations. New findings presented include: (i) a particle number-diameter distribution from 10 nm to 10 mu m that is representative of the pristine tropical rain forest and recommended for model use; (ii) the absence of substantial quantities of primary biological particles in the submicron mode as evidenced by mass spectral characterization; (iii) the large-scale production of secondary organic material; (iv) insights into the chemical and physical properties of the particles as revealed by thermodenuder-induced changes in the particle number-diameter distributions and mass spectra; and (v) comparisons of ground-based predictions and satellite-based observations of hydrometeor phase in clouds. A main finding of AMAZE-08 is the dominance of secondary organic material as particle components. The results presented here provide mechanistic insight and quantitative parameters that can serve to increase the accuracy of models of the formation, transformations, and cloud-forming properties of biogenic natural aerosol particles, especially as related to their effects on cloud activation and regional climate. (Less)
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organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
volume
10
issue
23
pages
11415 - 11438
publisher
Copernicus GmbH
external identifiers
  • wos:000285334900007
  • scopus:78649896351
ISSN
1680-7324
DOI
10.5194/acp-10-11415-2010
language
English
LU publication?
yes
additional info
The information about affiliations in this record was updated in December 2015. The record was previously connected to the following departments: Nuclear Physics (Faculty of Technology) (011013007)
id
ec5e11f5-75e1-4add-a83f-9b516f5a532b (old id 1772335)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:25:05
date last changed
2022-04-20 02:00:23
@article{ec5e11f5-75e1-4add-a83f-9b516f5a532b,
  abstract     = {{The Amazon Basin provides an excellent environment for studying the sources, transformations, and properties of natural aerosol particles and the resulting links between biological processes and climate. With this framework in mind, the Amazonian Aerosol Characterization Experiment (AMAZE-08), carried out from 7 February to 14 March 2008 during the wet season in the central Amazon Basin, sought to understand the formation, transformations, and cloud-forming properties of fine-and coarse-mode biogenic aerosol particles, especially as related to their effects on cloud activation and regional climate. Special foci included (1) the production mechanisms of secondary organic components at a pristine continental site, including the factors regulating their temporal variability, and (2) predicting and understanding the cloud-forming properties of biogenic particles at such a site. In this overview paper, the field site and the instrumentation employed during the campaign are introduced. Observations and findings are reported, including the large-scale context for the campaign, especially as provided by satellite observations. New findings presented include: (i) a particle number-diameter distribution from 10 nm to 10 mu m that is representative of the pristine tropical rain forest and recommended for model use; (ii) the absence of substantial quantities of primary biological particles in the submicron mode as evidenced by mass spectral characterization; (iii) the large-scale production of secondary organic material; (iv) insights into the chemical and physical properties of the particles as revealed by thermodenuder-induced changes in the particle number-diameter distributions and mass spectra; and (v) comparisons of ground-based predictions and satellite-based observations of hydrometeor phase in clouds. A main finding of AMAZE-08 is the dominance of secondary organic material as particle components. The results presented here provide mechanistic insight and quantitative parameters that can serve to increase the accuracy of models of the formation, transformations, and cloud-forming properties of biogenic natural aerosol particles, especially as related to their effects on cloud activation and regional climate.}},
  author       = {{Martin, S. T. and Andreae, M. O. and Althausen, D. and Artaxo, P. and Baars, H. and Borrmann, S. and Chen, Q. and Farmer, D. K. and Guenther, A. and Gunthe, S. S. and Jimenez, J. L. and Karl, T. and Longo, K. and Manzi, A. and Mueller, T. and Pauliquevis, T. and Petters, M. D. and Prenni, A. J. and Poeschl, U. and Rizzo, L. V. and Schneider, J. and Smith, J. N. and Swietlicki, Erik and Tota, J. and Wang, J. and Wiedensohler, A. and Zorn, S. R.}},
  issn         = {{1680-7324}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{23}},
  pages        = {{11415--11438}},
  publisher    = {{Copernicus GmbH}},
  series       = {{Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics}},
  title        = {{An overview of the Amazonian Aerosol Characterization Experiment 2008 (AMAZE-08)}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-10-11415-2010}},
  doi          = {{10.5194/acp-10-11415-2010}},
  volume       = {{10}},
  year         = {{2010}},
}