Focus on interactions between ocean and atmosphere around the Antarctic Peninsula
Credit: Marcel Köning, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel
Ushuaia/Leipzig. During the next weeks, a Spanish research expedition will investigate climate change on the Antarctic Peninsula. Two researchers from the Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) are also be participating to investigate the influence of sugar compounds on cloud formation above the ocean. In January, the research vessel R/V Hespérides from Ushuaia in Argentina have set off for the PI-ICE expedition. The expedition around the Antarctic Peninsula will be followed by laboratory experiments on the interactions between atmosphere, ice and ocean at the Spanish Antarctic station Juan Carlos I on Livingstone Island between Antarctica and the southern tip of South America until mid-March.
The Spanish Antarctic expedition PI-ICE (Polar atmosphere-ice-ocean Interactions: Impact on Climate and Ecology) focuses on the effects of natural marine aerosols on climate and ecology. These tiny particles from the ocean are of great importance because they strongly influence solar radiation in the atmosphere and biogeochemical cycles. Nevertheless, there is a lack of aerosol data in the polar regions and especially in the polar sea ice zones, which are one of the largest ecosystems in the world, with a multitude of habitats and organisms living under extreme conditions. As climate change is particularly rapid in the polar regions, understanding of these biogeochemical processes at the air-ice sea interface is crucial to identify feedback mechanisms that influence climate change.
The research vessel R/V Hespérides will therefore bring together experts from a wide range of disciplines. “We were very pleased to receive an invitation from expedition leader Dr. Manuel Dall’Osto from the CSIC Institute for Marine Research, as it gives us the opportunity to study the Southern Ocean as well as the Arctic Ocean. The comparison of the two polar regions could reveal interesting relationships”, reports Dr. Manuela van Pinxteren from TROPOS. The atmospheric chemist is a expert in organic substances and has specialised in the interactions between the atmosphere and the ocean. Among other things, she leads the Leibniz project MarParCloud, which investigates the process from bioproduction in the ocean to organic aerosol particles and maritime clouds. The focus is on the surface film of the ocean. “This wafer-thin layer acts like a filter between the water and the air. Everything that wants to go from one world to another has to pass through there. We will collect this surface film again with a glass plate from the inflatable boat or the ice edge and freeze it so that we can later examine it in the laboratory in Leipzig for substances from the sea and the air,” says van Pinxteren. Therefore, her team also takes air and water samples at the same time to decipher the path of the substances.
The focus is particularly on so-called polysaccharides, i.e. multiple sugars, which are formed by plankton in seawater, are released into the air and then become particles on which water condenses or freezes to ice. This is how clouds form. The formation and reflectivity of the clouds then has consequences for the energy balance of the atmosphere and the melting of the ice, which in turn influences the plankton in the ocean. These very complex feedback processes between biosphere and climate will also be part of the MOSAiC expedition: In September 2019, the German research icebreaker Polarstern, led by the Alfred Wegener Institute (AWI), will drift through the Arctic Ocean for one year. Supplied by additional icebreakers and aircraft, a total of 600 people from 17 countries will take part in the MOSAiC expedition. Together with an international partner, the AWI is responsible for the five main research areas: physics of sea ice and snow cover, processes in the atmosphere and in the ocean, biogeochemical cycles and the ecosystem of the Arctic. TROPOS will play a leading role in two central measurements: Firstly, a remote sensing container for the entire ice drift will continuously explore the vertical aerosol and cloud distribution using lidar, radar and microwave radiometers. On the other hand, a tethered balloon will measure the Arctic boundary layer as accurately as possible during the fourth leg of the journey. Manuela van Pinxteren will also investigate the surface film on the sea and on melt pools. “In 2019/20 many nations will focus on the Arctic through the MOSAiC expedition. At the same time, climate change is also progressing in Antarctica. The Spanish Antarctic expedition is therefore important in order to better understand parallels and differences,” explains Sebastian Zeppenfeld of TROPOS, who will take part in the first part of the expedition. In the second part, he will be replaced in mid-February by Manuela van Pinxteren, who plans to spend a month at the Spanish Antarctic station Juan Carlos I on Livingstone Island, where she will carry out laboratory experiments in addition to field measurements.
Since 2016, the Collaborative Research Centre TR172 of the German Research Foundation (DFG) has been investigating “Arctic Amplification”, to find out why the Arctic is warming much more than the rest of the Earth. In addition to the University of Leipzig, this research network also includes the universities of Bremen and Cologne, the Alfred Wegener Institute, the Helmholtz Centre for Polar and Marine Research (AWI) and the Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS) in Leipzig.
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Links:
R/V Hespérides:
https:/
http://www.
Position oft he R/V Hespérides:
http://www.
Juan Carlos I Antarctic Base:
https:/
http://www.
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http://www.
Livingston Island:
https:/
PS 106:
https:/
https:/
MOSAiC:
https:/
Leibniz project MarParCloud ( Marine biological production, organic aerosol particles and marine clouds: a Process Chain):
https:/
DFG Transregional Collaborative Research Centre TR 172 „Arctic Amplification”:
http://www.
Contakts
Dr Manuela van Pinxteren
Scientist, Atmospheric Chemistry Department
Leibniz Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS)
Phone +49 341 2717-7102
https:/
and
Prof Hartmut Herrmann
Head of the Atmospheric Chemistry Department
Leibniz-Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS)
Phone +49 341 2717-7024
https:/
as well as
Dr Manuel Dall´Osto
Research Group on Marine Biogeochemistry and Global Change
Institut de Ciències del Mar, CSIC
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
http://biogeochemistry.
or
Tilo Arnhold
Public Relations, Leibniz-Institute for Tropospheric Research (TROPOS)
Phone +49-341-2717-7189
https:/
and
Ainhoa Goñi Sainz
Directora de Comunicación
CSIC
http://www.
Media Contact
Tilo Arnhold
[email protected]
49-341-271-77189
Original Source
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