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Title: Arctic Black Carbon Aerosol Deposition Study North Slope of Alaska 2020- SP2 Measurements

Abstract

Particles are removed from the atmosphere through both wet and dry deposition. These processes are poorly understood, though they constitute important uncertainties in climate and air quality models. This project aims to use observational constraints on particle fluxes to improve model representations of dry deposition. Within this data set, we measured refractory black carbon with a single particle soot photometer (SP2) at the ARM facility’s North Slope of Alaska site. Measurements were made at the meteorological tower between 9 Sept and 27 Oct 2021. This site is a coastal tundra location, and received snow during the project.


Citation Formats

Boedicker, Erin, Farmer, Delphine, Garofalo, Lauren, Liedtke, Roman, De_Groodt, Adam, and Nielson, Sara. Arctic Black Carbon Aerosol Deposition Study North Slope of Alaska 2020- SP2 Measurements. United States: N. p., 2025. Web. doi:10.5439/2573054.
Boedicker, Erin, Farmer, Delphine, Garofalo, Lauren, Liedtke, Roman, De_Groodt, Adam, & Nielson, Sara. Arctic Black Carbon Aerosol Deposition Study North Slope of Alaska 2020- SP2 Measurements. United States. doi:https://doi.org/10.5439/2573054
Boedicker, Erin, Farmer, Delphine, Garofalo, Lauren, Liedtke, Roman, De_Groodt, Adam, and Nielson, Sara. 2025. "Arctic Black Carbon Aerosol Deposition Study North Slope of Alaska 2020- SP2 Measurements". United States. doi:https://doi.org/10.5439/2573054. https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/2573054. Pub date:Fri Jul 25 00:00:00 EDT 2025
@article{osti_2573054,
title = {Arctic Black Carbon Aerosol Deposition Study North Slope of Alaska 2020- SP2 Measurements},
author = {Boedicker, Erin and Farmer, Delphine and Garofalo, Lauren and Liedtke, Roman and De_Groodt, Adam and Nielson, Sara},
abstractNote = {Particles are removed from the atmosphere through both wet and dry deposition. These processes are poorly understood, though they constitute important uncertainties in climate and air quality models. This project aims to use observational constraints on particle fluxes to improve model representations of dry deposition. Within this data set, we measured refractory black carbon with a single particle soot photometer (SP2) at the ARM facility’s North Slope of Alaska site. Measurements were made at the meteorological tower between 9 Sept and 27 Oct 2021. This site is a coastal tundra location, and received snow during the project.},
doi = {10.5439/2573054},
journal = {},
number = ,
volume = ,
place = {United States},
year = {Fri Jul 25 00:00:00 EDT 2025},
month = {Fri Jul 25 00:00:00 EDT 2025}
}