Role of atmospheric aerosols in severe winter fog over the Indo-Gangetic Plain of India: a case study

Winter fog and severe aerosol loading in the boundary layer over northern India, particularly in the Indo-Gangetic Plain (IGP), disrupt the daily lives of millions of people in the region. To better understand the role of aerosol-radiation (AR) feedback on the occurrence, spatial extent, and persistence of winter fog, as well as the associated aqueous chemistry in fog in the IGP, several model simulations have been performed using the Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry (WRF-Chem). While WRF-Chem was able to represent the fog formation for the 23-24 December 2017 fog event over the central IGP in comparison to station and satellite observations, the model underestimated PM 2.5 concentrations compared to the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) of India monitoring network. While evaluating aerosol composition for fog events in the IGP, we found that the WRF-Chem aerosol composition was quite different from measurements obtained during the Winter Fog Experiment (WiFEX) in Delhi, with secondary aerosols, particularly the chloride aerosol fraction, being strongly underpredicted ( similar to 66.6 %). Missing emission sources (e.g., industry and residential burning of cow dung and trash) and aerosol and chemistry processes need to be investigated to improve model-observation agreement. By investigating a fog event on 23-24 December 2017 over the central IGP, we found that the aerosol-radiation feedback weakens turbulence, lowers the boundary layer height, and increases PM 2.5 concentrations and relative humidity (RH) within the boundary layer. Factors affecting the feedback include loss of aerosols through deposition of cloud droplets and internal mixing of absorbing and scattering aerosols. Aqueous-phase chemistry increases the PM 2.5 concentrations, which subsequently affect the aerosol-radiation feedback by both increased mass concentrations and aerosol sizes. With aerosol-radiation interaction and aqueous-phase chemistry, fog formation began 1-2 h earlier and caused a longer fog duration than when these processes were not included in the WRF-Chem simulation. The increase in RH in both experiments was found to be important for fog formation as it promoted the growth of aerosol size through water uptake, increasing the fog water content over the IGP. The results from this study suggest that the aerosol-radiation feedback and secondary aerosol formation play an important role in the air quality and the intensity and lifetime of fog over the IGP, yet other feedbacks, such as aerosol-cloud interactions, need to be quantified.

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Related Dataset #1 : OWBEII 2020

Related Dataset #2 : MODIS/Terra Aerosol 5-Min L2 Swath 10km

Related Dataset #3 : MYD04_L2 MODIS/Aqua Aerosol 5-Min L2 Swath 10km

Related Service #1 : Cheyenne: SGI ICE XA Cluster

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Author Bharali, C.
Barth, Mary
Kumar, Rajesh
Ghude, S. D.
Sinha, V.
Sinha, B.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2024-06-06T00:00:00
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2025-07-10T20:01:23.114260
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:27248
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Bharali, C., Barth, Mary, Kumar, Rajesh, Ghude, S. D., Sinha, V., Sinha, B.. (2024). Role of atmospheric aerosols in severe winter fog over the Indo-Gangetic Plain of India: a case study. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7jd521d. Accessed 11 August 2025.

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