Observationally constrained analysis of sulfur cycle in the marine atmosphere with NASA ATom measurements and AeroCom model simulations

The atmospheric sulfur cycle plays a key role in air quality, climate, and ecosystems, such as pollution, radiative forcing, new particle formation, and acid rain. In this study, we compare the spatially and temporally resolved measurements from the NASA Atmospheric Tomography (ATom) mission with simulations from five AeroCom III models for four sulfur species (dimethyl sulfide (DMS), sulfur dioxide (SO 2 ), particulate methanesulfonate (MSA), and particulate sulfate (SO 4 ) ). We focus on remote regions over the Pacific, Atlantic, and Southern oceans from near the surface to similar to 12 km altitude range covering all four seasons. In general, the differences among model results can be greater than 1 order of magnitude. Comparing with observations, model-simulated SO 2 is generally low, whereas SO 4 is generally high. Simulated DMS concentrations near the sea surface exceed observed levels by a factor of 5 in most cases, suggesting potential overestimation of DMS emissions in all models. With GEOS model simulations of tagging emission from anthropogenic, biomass burning, volcanic, and oceanic sources, we find that anthropogenic emissions are the dominant source of sulfate aerosol (40 %-60 % of the total amount) in the ATom measurements at almost all altitudes, followed by volcanic emissions (18 %-32 %) and oceanic sources (16 %-32 %). Similar source contributions can also be derived at broad ocean basins and on monthly scales, indicating the representativeness of ATom measurements for global ocean. Our work presents the first assessment of AeroCom sulfur study using ATom measurements, providing directions for improving sulfate simulations, which remain the largest uncertainty in radiative forcing estimates in aerosol climate models.

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Related Links

Related Dataset #1 : ATom: L2 Measurements from CU High-Resolution Aerosol Mass Spectrometer (HR-AMS)

Related Dataset #2 : Simulated CO2 and tracer concentrations in the Northern Hemisphere from a tagged transport model GEOS-Chem v12.0.0

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Author Bian, H.
Chin, M.
Colarco, P. R.
Apel, Eric C.
Blake, D. R.
Froyd, K.
Hornbrook, Rebecca
Jimenez, J.
Jost, P. C.
Lawler, M.
Liu, M.
Lund, M. T.
Matsui, H.
Nault, B. A.
Penner, J. E.
Rollins, A. W.
Schill, G.
Skeie, R. B.
Wang, H.
Xu, L.
Zhang, K.
Zhu, J.
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2024-02-07T00:00:00
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) Not Assigned
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2025-07-10T20:04:19.989084
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:27129
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Bian, H., Chin, M., Colarco, P. R., Apel, Eric C., Blake, D. R., Froyd, K., Hornbrook, Rebecca, Jimenez, J., Jost, P. C., Lawler, M., Liu, M., Lund, M. T., Matsui, H., Nault, B. A., Penner, J. E., Rollins, A. W., Schill, G., Skeie, R. B., Wang, H., Xu, L., Zhang, K., Zhu, J.. (2024). Observationally constrained analysis of sulfur cycle in the marine atmosphere with NASA ATom measurements and AeroCom model simulations. UCAR/NCAR - Library. https://n2t.org/ark:/85065/d7f47t95. Accessed 09 August 2025.

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