https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/23/7975/2023/

*Authors*
Clarissa Baldo <clarissa.ba...@lisa.ipsl.fr>, Paola Formenti, Claudia Di
Biagio, Gongda Lu, Congbo Song, Mathieu Cazaunau, Edouard Pangui, Jean-Francois
Doussin, Pavla Dagsson-Waldhauserova, Olafur Arnalds, David Beddows, A.
Robert MacKenzie, and Zongbo Shi
*18 July 2023*
*https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-7975-2023
<https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-23-7975-2023>*
*Abstract*

Icelandic dust can impact the radiative budget in high-latitude regions
directly by affecting light absorption and scattering and indirectly by
changing the surface albedo after dust deposition. This tends to produce a
positive radiative forcing. However, the limited knowledge of the spectral
optical properties of Icelandic dust prevents an accurate assessment of
these radiative effects. Here, the spectral single scattering albedo (SSA)
and the complex refractive index (m=n-ik) of Icelandic dust from five major
emission hotspots were retrieved between 370–950 nm using online
measurements of size distribution and spectral absorption (*β*abs) and
scattering (*β*sca) coefficients of particles suspended in a large-scale
atmospheric simulation chamber. The SSA(*λ*) estimated from the measured *β*
abs and *β*sca increased from 0.90–0.94 at 370 nm to 0.94–0.96 at 950 nm in
Icelandic dust from the different hotspots, which falls within the range of
mineral dust from northern Africa and eastern Asia. The spectral complex
refractive index was retrieved by minimizing the differences between the
measured *β*abs and *β*sca and those computed using the Mie theory for
spherical and internally homogeneous particles, using the size distribution
data as input. The real part of the complex refractive index (*n*(*λ*)) was
found to be 1.60–1.61 in the different samples and be independent of
wavelength. The imaginary part (*k*(*λ*)) was almost constant with
wavelength and was found to be around 0.004 at 370 nm and 0.002–0.003 at
950 nm. The estimated complex refractive index was close to the initial
estimates based on the mineralogical composition, also suggesting that the
high magnetite content observed in Icelandic dust may contribute to its
high absorption capacity in the shortwave part of the spectrum. The
*k*(*λ*) values
retrieved for Icelandic dust are at the upper end of the reported range for
low-latitude dust (e.g., from the Sahel). Furthermore, Icelandic dust tends
to be more absorbing towards the near-infrared. In Icelandic dust,
*k*(*λ*) between
660–950 nm was 2–8 times higher than most of the dust samples sourced in
northern Africa and eastern Asia. This suggests that Icelandic dust may
have a stronger positive direct radiative forcing on climate that has not
been accounted for in climate predictions.
*Source: European Geosciences Union*

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