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DOE Scientists Sample the SkiesJune 28, 2004 This summer, scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory (ANL), Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL), and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) will take to the skies above Western Pennsylvania for one month to sample the air for aerosol pollutants and evaluate their effects on Earth's climate. The research is part of the International Consortium for Atmospheric Research on Transport and Transformation (ICARTT) experiment, an effort by many separate institutions and government agencies to conduct a joint regional air quality and climate study of unprecedented scope. "One main goal is to understand how pollutants from the Northeastern U.S. affect climate and air quality as they spread over the North Atlantic Ocean," said Peter Daum, lead researcher for the Brookhaven/DOE team. Other ICARTT collaborators include the National Atmospheric and Oceanographic Administration (NOAA), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the University of New Hampshire, and others in Canada and Europe (see http://www.al.noaa.gov/ICARTT/ ).
"This large multi-agency study is a good example of how organizations with common goals can collaborate, pool resources, and accomplish something that they cannot do by themselves," said Daum. Aerosols such as sulfur compounds result from emissions by fossil-fuel-burning power plants and other industrial sources. By themselves, and by affecting the brightness of clouds, they may increase the amount of incoming sunlight that is reflected back into space, thereby exerting a partial cooling effect on Earth's climate. "But because their concentrations are highly variable and because they are removed from the atmosphere fairly quickly, it is difficult to assess these effects and the impact of aerosols on climate without collecting data in the ambient atmosphere," said Daum. So the scientists participating in NEAX will conduct studies of aerosol formation and growth in plumes from point sources such as power plants, and in urban plumes with different characteristics. They'll also conduct air-mass scale studies to see how the chemical, microphysical, and optical properties of aerosols evolve as the air-mass ages and is transported to the east away from its sources. Ultimately, they hope to characterize how much aerosols and aerosol precursors in the Midwest contribute to the aerosol burden over the western North Atlantic Ocean. "Lack of knowledge regarding how aerosols are formed and distributed in the atmosphere and how they change the properties of clouds is one the key factors preventing more accurate predictions of climate change, "Daum said. In addition to $1 million for the G-1 aircraft and approximately 10 DOE-funded scientists, the Atmospheric Sciences Program within OBER is contributing about $300,000 in funding for the study. All measurement data from DOE will be made fully and freely available to both the scientific community and the public. - Karen McNulty Walsh, BNL |
| Chief Scientist | ASP Program Director | Program Manager for Instrument Development and Lab Measurements |
| Stephen E. Schwartz
Atmospheric Sciences Division Brookhaven National Laboratory Bldg 815E, 75 Rutherford Drive Upton NY 11973 (631) 344-3100 Fax: (631) 344-2887 Email: ses@bnl.gov |
Peter W. Lunn
Climate Change Research Division U.S. Department of Energy, SC-74 1000 Independence Avenue SW Washington DC 20585-0002 (301) 903-4819 Fax: (301) 903-8519 Email: Peter.Lunn@science.doe.gov |
Rickey Petty
Climate Change Research Division U.S. Department of Energy, SC-74 1000 Independence Avenue SW Washington DC 20585-0002 (301) 903-5548 Fax: (301) 903-8519 Email: Rickey.Petty@science.doe.gov |