National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration
United States Department of Commerce


 

FY 2011

Maritime aerosol network as a component of AERONET – first results and comparison with global aerosol models and satellite retrievals

Smirnov, A., B.N. Holben, D.M. Giles, I. Slutsker, N.T. O’Neill, T.F. Eck, A. Macke, P. Croot, Y. Courcoux, S.M. Sakerin, T.J. Smyth, T. Zielinski, G. Zibordi, J.I. Goes, M.J. Harvey, P.K. Quinn, N.B. Nelson, V.F. Radionov, C.M. Duarte, R. Losno, J. Sciare, K.J. Voss, S. Kinne, N.R. Nalli, E. Joseph, K. Krishna Moorthy, D.S. Covert, S.K. Gulev, G. Milinevsky, P. Larouche, S. Belanger, E. Horne, M. Chin, L.A. Remer, R.A. Kahn, J.S. Reid, M. Schulz, C.L. Heald, J. Zhang, K. Lapina, R.G. Kleidman, J. Griesfeller, B.J. Gaitley, Q. Tan, and T.L. Diehl

Atmos. Meas. Tech., 4, 583–597, doi: 10.5194/amt-4-583-2011 (2011)


The Maritime Aerosol Network (MAN) has been collecting data over the oceans since November 2006. Over 80 cruises were completed through early 2010 with deployments continuing. Measurement areas included various parts of the Atlantic Ocean, the Northern and Southern Pacific Ocean, the South Indian Ocean, the Southern Ocean, the Arctic Ocean and inland seas. MAN deploys Microtops handheld sunphotometers and utilizes a calibration procedure and data processing traceable to AERONET. Data collection included areas that previously had no aerosol optical depth (AOD) coverage at all, particularly vast areas of the Southern Ocean. The MAN data archive provides a valuable resource for aerosol studies in maritime environments. In the current paper we present results of AOD measurements over the oceans, and make a comparison with satellite AOD retrievals and model simulations.



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