Communications Earth & Environment (Sep 2024)

Surface warming in Svalbard may have led to increases in highly active ice-nucleating particles

  • Yutaka Tobo,
  • Kouji Adachi,
  • Kei Kawai,
  • Hitoshi Matsui,
  • Sho Ohata,
  • Naga Oshima,
  • Yutaka Kondo,
  • Ove Hermansen,
  • Masaki Uchida,
  • Jun Inoue,
  • Makoto Koike

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01677-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract The roles of Arctic aerosols as ice-nucleating particles remain poorly understood, even though their effects on cloud microphysics are crucial for assessing the climate sensitivity of Arctic mixed-phase clouds and predicting their response to Arctic warming. Here we present a full-year record of ice-nucleating particle concentrations over Svalbard, where surface warming has been anomalously faster than the Arctic average. While the variation of ice-nucleating particles active at around −30 °C was relatively small, those active at higher temperatures (i.e., highly active ice-nucleating particles) tended to increase exponentially with rising surface air temperatures when the surface air temperatures rose above 0 °C and snow/ice-free barren and vegetated areas appeared in Svalbard. The aerosol population relevant to their increase was largely characterized by dust and biological organic materials that likely originated from local/regional terrestrial sources. Our results suggest that highly active ice-nucleating particles could be actively released from Arctic natural sources in response to surface warming.