Atmospheric ice nuclei at the high-altitude observatory Jungfraujoch, Switzerland
Abstract
The state of a slightly supercooled ephemeral cloud can be changed by the presence of a few particles capable of catalysing freezing, and potentially result in precipitation. We investigated the atmospheric abundance of particles active as ice nuclei at −8°C (IN−8) over the course of a year at the high-alpine station Jungfraujoch (3580 m.a.s.l., Switzerland) through the use of immersion freezing assays of particles collected on quartz micro-fibre filters. In addition, we determined IN−8 on a hill in the planetary boundary layer 95 km northwest of Jungfraujoch and in the dust laden Saharan Air Layer reaching Tenerife. Results indicate a strong seasonality of IN−8 at Jungfraujoch. Values were largest during summer (between 1 and 10 m−3) and about two orders of magnitude smaller during winter. Sahara dust events had a negligible influence on IN−8 at Jungfraujoch. Seasonality in the boundary layer was not observed in the upper, but in the lower bound of IN−8 values. Values<1 m−3 were only found on cold winter days, when IN−8 were more likely to have already been activated and deposited than on warmer days. A good correlation between IN−8 and maximum daily temperature at Jungfraujoch (R2=0.54) suggests IN−8 abundance at Jungfraujoch may be limited most of the year by microphysical processing related to IN activation in approaching air masses. Show more
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https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000099614Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Tellus B: Chemical and Physical MeteorologyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
International Meteorological Institute in StockholmSubject
Ice nuclei; Slight supercooling; Seasonal cycle; Desert dustMore
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