Remote Sensing (Oct 2022)

Evaluation of Aerosol Typing with Combination of Remote Sensing Techniques with In Situ Data during the PANACEA Campaigns in Thessaloniki Station, Greece

  • Kalliopi Artemis Voudouri,
  • Konstantinos Michailidis,
  • Nikolaos Siomos,
  • Anthi Chatzopoulou,
  • Georgios Kouvarakis,
  • Nikolaos Mihalopoulos,
  • Paraskevi Tzoumaka,
  • Apostolos Kelessis,
  • Dimitrios Balis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs14205076
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 20
p. 5076

Abstract

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Two measurement campaigns were conducted at Thessaloniki, an urban station, (40.5°N, 22.9°E; 60 m) in the frame of the PANhellenic infrastructure for Atmospheric Composition and climatEchAnge (PANACEA) project. The first one covers the period from July to August 2019 and the second one from January to February An overview of the aerosol optical properties (columnar and height resolved), acquired with the remote sensing infrastructure of the Laboratory of Atmospheric Physics (LAP) of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (AUTH), as well as the additional instrumentation that participated during the PANACEA campaigns is presented. The majority of the detected layers (16 out of 40, ranged between 0.8 and 4.5 km) are classified as biomass burning aerosols, attributed to either city sources or long range transport. Concerning the other aerosol types, the Clean Continental cluster has an occurrence ratio of 23%, while dust layers and mixtures with urban particles transported to Thessaloniki are also identified. Our findings are discussed along with the surface information, i.e., the particulate matter (PM2.5 and PM10) concentrations and the black carbon (BC) concentration, separated into fossil fuel (BCff) and biomass/wood burning (BCwb) fractions. This is the first time that collocated in situ and remote sensing instruments are deployed in Thessaloniki in order to assess the presence of aerosols and the predominant aerosol type both in situ and at elevated heights. Overall, our study showed that the BCwb contribution to the BC values in Thessaloniki is quite low (11%), whilst the majority of the biomass burning layers identified with the lidar system, are also linked with enhanced BC contribution and high Fine Mode Fraction values.

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