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Influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a South African coastal zone

Aerosols are microscopic solid or liquid particles suspended in the atmosphere, which impact and are impacted by many physicochemical processes related to climate. By scattering and absorbing solar radiation and acting as cloud condensation nuclei, they have both a direct effect and indirect effect...

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Main Author: February, Faith
Other Authors: Altieri, Katye
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Oceanography 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author February, Faith
author2 Altieri, Katye
author_browse Altieri, Katye
February, Faith
author_facet Altieri, Katye
February, Faith
author_sort February, Faith
collection Thesis
description Aerosols are microscopic solid or liquid particles suspended in the atmosphere, which impact and are impacted by many physicochemical processes related to climate. By scattering and absorbing solar radiation and acting as cloud condensation nuclei, they have both a direct effect and indirect effect on Earth's radiative budget. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) recognizes aerosols as an important component of climate change, and as such the estimation of their impacts on climate remains an important scientific challenge. Atmospheric aerosol sources include natural and anthropogenic emissions, and these are both present in coastal areas. Marine aerosols are a major contributor to total aerosols in coastal regions, and these aerosols can interact with other gases and molecules, and influence biogeochemical cycles, air quality, and human health. Due to the complex nature of aerosols in coastal areas and the importance of aerosols to climate change, there is a need for in-situ observational aerosol data from data poor regions, which is the case for most of the Southern Hemisphere. To that aim, this thesis presents an extensive series of measurements of aerosol properties (concentrations, sizes, and types) at the coastal location of Simon's Town in False Bay, to characterize these properties for the first time in a coastal region of South Africa. The study site provides the opportunity to measure these aerosol properties in pristine marine conditions exclusively, as well as mixed conditions typical of a coastal site. With these geographical advantages and long-term, unbiased measurements, the aerosol processes of generation, transport, dispersion, mixing, and deposition have been investigated under unique natural conditions. The data analyses focus on evaluating changes in the average particle size distributions with changes in meteorological parameters. An increase in aerosol concentrations with an increase in wind speed during clean marine conditions resulted in the identification of sea spray generation and long-range transport as the dominant natural aerosol processes with the type of aerosol being predominantly marine. For the NW conditions, a decrease in aerosol concentrations with an increase in wind speed led to the identification of dispersion as the dominant process. A mixture of aerosol types emerged, but the higher aerosol concentrations for the pure continental conditions compared to the pure marine conditions indicated that non-marine aerosols dominate around 0.4 μm and 10 μm. The main conclusions of this thesis focus on the behavior of natural sea spray aerosols in the absence of continental or anthropogenic sources. This highlights the pure marine influence of the Southern Ocean at this location and the unique opportunity to explore understudied natural aerosol processes absent from anthropogenic influence.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:07.122Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Oceanography
publisherStr Department of Oceanography
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39423 Influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a South African coastal zone February, Faith Altieri, Katye Oceanography Aerosols are microscopic solid or liquid particles suspended in the atmosphere, which impact and are impacted by many physicochemical processes related to climate. By scattering and absorbing solar radiation and acting as cloud condensation nuclei, they have both a direct effect and indirect effect on Earth's radiative budget. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) recognizes aerosols as an important component of climate change, and as such the estimation of their impacts on climate remains an important scientific challenge. Atmospheric aerosol sources include natural and anthropogenic emissions, and these are both present in coastal areas. Marine aerosols are a major contributor to total aerosols in coastal regions, and these aerosols can interact with other gases and molecules, and influence biogeochemical cycles, air quality, and human health. Due to the complex nature of aerosols in coastal areas and the importance of aerosols to climate change, there is a need for in-situ observational aerosol data from data poor regions, which is the case for most of the Southern Hemisphere. To that aim, this thesis presents an extensive series of measurements of aerosol properties (concentrations, sizes, and types) at the coastal location of Simon's Town in False Bay, to characterize these properties for the first time in a coastal region of South Africa. The study site provides the opportunity to measure these aerosol properties in pristine marine conditions exclusively, as well as mixed conditions typical of a coastal site. With these geographical advantages and long-term, unbiased measurements, the aerosol processes of generation, transport, dispersion, mixing, and deposition have been investigated under unique natural conditions. The data analyses focus on evaluating changes in the average particle size distributions with changes in meteorological parameters. An increase in aerosol concentrations with an increase in wind speed during clean marine conditions resulted in the identification of sea spray generation and long-range transport as the dominant natural aerosol processes with the type of aerosol being predominantly marine. For the NW conditions, a decrease in aerosol concentrations with an increase in wind speed led to the identification of dispersion as the dominant process. A mixture of aerosol types emerged, but the higher aerosol concentrations for the pure continental conditions compared to the pure marine conditions indicated that non-marine aerosols dominate around 0.4 μm and 10 μm. The main conclusions of this thesis focus on the behavior of natural sea spray aerosols in the absence of continental or anthropogenic sources. This highlights the pure marine influence of the Southern Ocean at this location and the unique opportunity to explore understudied natural aerosol processes absent from anthropogenic influence. 2024-04-18T13:23:26Z 2024-04-18T13:23:26Z 2023 2024-04-18T12:40:20Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39423 Eng application/pdf Department of Oceanography Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Oceanography
February, Faith
Influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a South African coastal zone
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a South African coastal zone
title_full Influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a South African coastal zone
title_fullStr Influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a South African coastal zone
title_full_unstemmed Influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a South African coastal zone
title_short Influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a South African coastal zone
title_sort influence of environmental parameters on atmospheric aerosol size distributions in a south african coastal zone
topic Oceanography
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39423
work_keys_str_mv AT februaryfaith influenceofenvironmentalparametersonatmosphericaerosolsizedistributionsinasouthafricancoastalzone