Publication Details

AFRICAN RESEARCH NEXUS

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agricultural and biological sciences

Characterization of the optical properties of biomass burning aerosols in Zambia during the 1997 ZIBBEE field campaign

Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres, Volume 106, No. D4, Article 2000JD900555, Year 2001

The physical and optical properties of biomass burning aerosols in a savanna region in south central Africa (Zambia) were analyzed from measurements made during the Zambian International Biomass Burning Emissions Experiment (ZIBBEE) during August-September 1997. Due to the large spatial extent of African savannas and the high frequency of occurrence of burning in the annual dry seasons, characterization of the optical properties of the resultant biomass burning aerosols is important for the study of atmospheric radiative processes and for remote sensing of both surface and atmospheric properties in these regions. Aerosol Robotic Network Sun-sky radiometer spectral measurements of direct Sun observations and directional sky radiances were utilized to infer spectral aerosol optical depths (τa), aerosol size distributions, and single-scattering albedos. During the primary ZIBBEE study period, which coincided with the peak period of biomass burning in the region, there was a high correlation between the measured τa and the total column water vapor or precipitable water vapor (PWV), suggesting transport of smoke aerosol from regions with higher PWV. Size distribution retrievals of the biomass burning smoke show that the accumulation mode dominated and a comparison with smoke from Amazonia (Bolivia) shows a shift toward smaller particles for African savanna smoke. This may be the result of differences in mode of combustion (flaming versus smoldering), fuel type and moisture content, and the aging processes of the aerosol. The single-scattering albedo (ωo) of the aerosols were retrieved using several approaches, yielding average values of ωo at ∼550 nm during ZIBBEE varying from ∼0.82 to ∼0.85, thus showing good agreement within the retrieval uncertainty of ∼0.03 of these methods. In general, ωo was relatively constant as a function of aerosol loading, with very little change occurring for τa at 440 nm ranging from 0.7 to 1.7. African savanna smoke exhibits significantly higher absorption than smoke from Amazonian forested regions and also a greater rate of decrease of ωo with increasing wavelength. Variations in the spectral change of the Ångström wavelength exponent were also investigated with respect to the degree of aerosol absorption and changes in the accumulation mode size distributions. Copyright 2001 by the American Geophysical Union.
Statistics
Citations: 242
Authors: 10
Affiliations: 5
Identifiers
Research Areas
Environmental
Study Approach
Quantitative
Study Locations
Zambia