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Aerosol characteristics at a high-altitude location during ISRO-GBP Land Campaign-II

Journal article published in 2006 by P. Pant, P. Hegde, U. C. Dumka, Auromeet Saha ORCID, Manoj K. Srivastava, Ram Sagar
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

We present detailed analysis of the extensively meas-ured aerosol parameters at the Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences (ARIES), Manora Peak Nainital, during ISRO–GBP Land Campaign-II. This land campaign was focused on the winter month of December 2004, using eight fixed stations distinctly located over the Gangetic belt in the North Indian corridor, where thick fog conditions generally prevail during winter. Among these stations, Manora Peak was selected due to its high-altitude location, at an altitude of ~2 km, having a pristine location in the Shivalik Ranges of Central Himalayas and allowing a free tro-pospheric site. In this perspective, observations of aerosol optical depths (AODs), black carbon (BC) mass concentration, total columnar ozone (TCO), mass loading of total suspended particulates (TSP), and number concentration of near-surface aerosols have been carried out from Manora Peak. These experiments barring AODs, were made for the first time at this loca-tion. The monthly mean AOD at 500 nm was found to be 0.056 (± ± 0.037). Temporal as well as the diurnal variation of BC mass concentration show almost simi-lar variation as that of aerosol number (>0.3 µ µm) con-centration, having relatively low values during night and early morning periods, and gradually increasing as the day advances reaching its maximum level around 1600 h local time. The monthly mean BC con-centration was found to be 1.36 (± ± 0.99) µ µg m –3 . Mass loading of TSP was in the range 20–40 µ µg m –3 , with a mean value of 27.1 (± ± 8.3) µ µg m –3 . During the period under study, average BC mass fraction at Nainital was found to be ~6.3 ± ± 2%. The monthly mean TCO was found to be 268 ± ± 22 DU. The diurnal variation of BC mass concentration shows a typical behaviour com-pared with other low-altitude stations, where simulta-neous measurements were made by other investigators during the campaign. This behaviour in the diurnal trend of aerosols is due to the topography and the boundary-layer dynamics over the high-altitude station of ARIES at Nainital.