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  4. The Influence of the Planetary Boundary Layer on the Atmospheric State at an Orographic Site at the Eastern Mediterranean
 
research article

The Influence of the Planetary Boundary Layer on the Atmospheric State at an Orographic Site at the Eastern Mediterranean

Foskinis, Romanos  
•
Gao, Kunfeng  
•
Gini, Maria i.
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June 14, 2024
Tellus Series B-Chemical And Physical Meteorology

We studied the influence of the Planetary Boundary Layer (PBL) on the air masses sampled at the mountaintop Hellenic Atmospheric Aerosol and Climate Change station ((HAC) 2 ) at Mount Helmos (Greece) during the Cloud-AerosoL InteractionS in the Helmos background TropOsphere (CALISTHO) Campaign from September 2021 to March 2022. The PBL Height (PBLH) was determined from the standard deviation of the vertical wind velocity ( sigma w ) measured by a wind Doppler lidar (over a 30 -min time window with 30 m spatial resolution); the height for which sigma w drops below a characteristic threshold of 0.1 m s -1 corresponds to the PBLH. The air mass characterization is independently carried out using in situ measurements sampled at (HAC) 2 (equivalent black carbon, eBC ; fluorescent particle number, aerosol size distributions, absolute humidity). We found that a distinct diurnal cycle of aerosol properties is seen when the station is inside the PBL (i.e., PBLH exceeds the (HAC) 2 altitude); and a complete lack thereof when it is in the Free Tropospheric Layer (FTL). Additionally, we identified transition periods where the (HAC) 2 site location alternates between the FTL (usually during the early morning hours) and the PBL (usually during the midday and late afternoon hours), during which the concentration and characteristics of the aerosols vary the most. Transition periods are also when orographic clouds are formed. The highest PBLH values occur in September [400 m above (HAC) 2 ] followed by a transition period in November, while the lowest ones occur in January [200 m below (HAC) 2 ]. We found also that the PBLH increases by 16 m per 1 degrees C increase of the ground temperature.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.16993/tellusb.1876
Web of Science ID

WOS:001248359000001

Author(s)
Foskinis, Romanos  
Gao, Kunfeng  
Gini, Maria i.
Diapouli, Evangelia
Vratolis, Stergios
Granakis, Konstantinos
Zografou, Olga
Kokkalis, Panagiotis
Komppula, Mika
Vakkari, Ville
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Date Issued

2024-06-14

Publisher

Stockholm Univ Press

Published in
Tellus Series B-Chemical And Physical Meteorology
Volume

76

Issue

1

Start page

19

End page

31

Subjects

Physical Sciences

•

Planetary Boundary Layer (Pbl)

•

Lidar

•

Aerosols

•

Bioaerosols

•

Ebc

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Wind Doppler Lidar

•

Helmos

•

(Hac) 2

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LAPI  
FunderGrant Number

General Secretariat of Research and Innovation

105658/17-10-2019

National Research Network for climate change and its effects

E.E -12365

Basic Research Program PEVE (NTUA)

PEVE0011/2021

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Available on Infoscience
July 3, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/209085
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