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DOI | 10.5194/acp-19-245-2019 |
An overview of airborne measurement in Nepal - Part 1: Vertical profile of aerosol size; number; spectral absorption; and meteorology | |
Singh A.; Mahata K.S.; Rupakheti M.; Junkermann W.; Panday A.K.; Lawrence M.G. | |
发表日期 | 2019 |
ISSN | 16807316 |
起始页码 | 245 |
结束页码 | 258 |
卷号 | 19期号:1 |
英文摘要 | The paper provides an overview of an airborne measurement campaign with a microlight aircraft over the Pokhara Valley region, Nepal, a metropolitan region in the central Himalayan foothills. This is the first aerial measurement in the central Himalayan foothill region, one of the polluted but relatively poorly sampled regions of the world. Conducted in two phases (in May 2016 and December 2016-January 2017), the goal of the overall campaign was to quantify the vertical distribution of aerosols over a polluted mountain valley in the Himalayan foothills, as well as to investigate the extent of regional transport of emissions into the Himalayas. This paper summarizes results from the first phase where test flights were conducted in May 2016 (pre-monsoon), with the objective of demonstrating the potential of airborne measurements in the region using a portable instrument package (size with housing case: 0.45m × 0.25m × 0.25m, 15kg) onboard an ultralight aircraft (IKARUS-C42). A total of five sampling test flights were conducted (each lasting for 1-1.5h) in the Pokhara Valley to characterize vertical profiles of aerosol properties such as aerosol number and size distribution (0.3-2 μ m), total particle concentration ( &14 nm), aerosol absorption (370-950nm), black carbon (BC), and meteorological variables. Although some interesting observations were made during the test flight, the study is limited to a few days (and only a few hours of flight in total) and thus the analysis presented may not represent the entire pollution-meteorology interaction found in the Pokhara Valley. The vertical profiles of aerosol species showed decreasing concentrations with altitude (815 to 4500ma.s.l.); a steep concentration gradient below 2000ma.s.l. in the morning; and mixed profiles (up to ca. 4000ma.s.l.) in the afternoon. The near-surface ( &1000 ma.s.l.) BC concentrations observed in the Pokhara Valley were much lower than pre-monsoon BC concentrations in the Kathmandu Valley, and similar in range to Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP) sites such as Kanpur in India. The sampling test flight also detected an elevated polluted aerosol layer (around 3000ma.s.l.) over the Pokhara Valley, which could be associated with the regional transport. The total aerosol and black carbon concentration in the polluted layer was comparable with the near-surface values. The elevated polluted layer was also characterized by a high aerosol extinction coefficient (at 550nm) and was identified as smoke and a polluted dust layer. The observed shift in the westerlies (at 20-30 ĝ N) entering Nepal during the test flight period could be an important factor for the presence of elevated polluted layers in the Pokhara Valley. © 2019 Copernicus GmbH. All rights reserved. |
语种 | 英语 |
scopus关键词 | aerial survey; aerosol property; black carbon; meteorology; metropolitan area; mountain region; particle size; size distribution; spectral analysis; Nepal; Pokhara Valley |
来源期刊 | Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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文献类型 | 期刊论文 |
条目标识符 | http://gcip.llas.ac.cn/handle/2XKMVOVA/144736 |
作者单位 | Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies, Potsdam, Germany; Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research, IMK-IFU, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany; International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD), Lalitpur, Nepal |
推荐引用方式 GB/T 7714 | Singh A.,Mahata K.S.,Rupakheti M.,et al. An overview of airborne measurement in Nepal - Part 1: Vertical profile of aerosol size; number; spectral absorption; and meteorology[J],2019,19(1). |
APA | Singh A.,Mahata K.S.,Rupakheti M.,Junkermann W.,Panday A.K.,&Lawrence M.G..(2019).An overview of airborne measurement in Nepal - Part 1: Vertical profile of aerosol size; number; spectral absorption; and meteorology.Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics,19(1). |
MLA | Singh A.,et al."An overview of airborne measurement in Nepal - Part 1: Vertical profile of aerosol size; number; spectral absorption; and meteorology".Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 19.1(2019). |
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