Extending the Atmospheric River Concept to Aerosols: Climate and Air
Quality Impacts
Abstract
Despite strong impacts that aerosols have on climate and air quality,
significant gaps remain in our knowledge concerning their long-range
transport, especially extreme transport events. With this consideration
in mind and by leveraging the “atmospheric river” concept, this work
develops an objective global algorithm for detecting aerosol atmospheric
rivers (AARs), shows a climatology of AARs, elucidates their
contributions to major global aerosol transport pathways, and
illustrates how AARs can drive extreme cases of poor air quality
conditions. Our methodology separately accounts for dust, carbonaceous
(accounting for organic and black carbon separately where appropriate),
sea salt and sulfate aerosols. Findings show there are a number of
long-range regional transport pathways where AARs account for a sizable
fraction (40-80%) of the total transport in relatively few events
(20-40 AAR days/year). This study highlights the role of AARs in
establishing source-receptor relationships that can drive regional
air-quality and extremes.