Analysis of summertime cloud water measurements made in a Southern Appalachian spruce forest |
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Authors: | Lawrence M. Reisinger Robert E. Imhoff |
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Affiliation: | 1. Tennessee Valley Authority, Atmospheric Science Department, 35660, Muscle Shoals, AL, U.S.A.
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Abstract: | This paper presents an analysis of cloud water measurements made during the summers of 1986 and 1987 at Whitetop Mountain, Virginia (36.639° N, 81.605° W). Analysis of cloud water chemistry, cloud type, and air mass origin are made for each cloud event occurring during one 3 to 4 week measurement ‘intensive’ per year. Regional source/receptor relationships are also investigated. Cloud water concentrations of major ions (i.e., H+, SO4 2?, NO3 ?, and NH4 +) are consistently higher during orographically formed ‘cap’ cloud events. Differences in cloud liquid water content between cap and frontal cloud events explains most, but not all, of the cloud water ion concentration differences. The remaining difference can be explained by greater rainfall associated with frontal cloud events. Most of the cloud water sulfate measured at Whitetop Mountain is apparently due to nucleation of aerosol sulfate within cloud droplets and not to local in-cloud aqueous phase SO, oxidation. No strong source/ receptor relationships were evident from this analysis. Most 72 hr air trajectories arriving at Whitetop Mountain during the cloud events described in this paper originated in the southeastern United States. Few came from the Ohio River Valley or the northeastern United States. |
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