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Dive into the research topics where C. E. Corrigan is active.

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Featured researches published by C. E. Corrigan.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Atmospheric brown clouds: Hemispherical and regional variations in long-range transport, absorption, and radiative forcing

V. Ramanathan; F. Li; Muvva Venkata Ramana; P. S. Praveen; Dohyeong Kim; C. E. Corrigan; Hien Van Nguyen; Elizabeth A. Stone; James J. Schauer; G. R. Carmichael; Bhupesh Adhikary; Soon Chang Yoon

polluted oceanic regions, the EC mass exceeds 0.5 m gm 3 , the OC mass exceeds 2 m gm 3 and sulfate mass exceeds 10 m gm 3 from the surface to 3 km. The brown clouds also have strong seasonal dependence. In the tropics the seasonal dependence is driven by pollution accumulating during the dry seasons, December to February in Northern Hemisphere tropics and June to August in Southern Hemisphere tropics. In the extratropics the pollution peaks during the summer. The brown cloud problem is not restricted to the tropical regions. Over the eastern half of US and western Europe the AODs exceeds 0.2 and absorption AODs exceed 0.02. Brown clouds also extend well into the western Pacific Ocean, the Indian Ocean reaching as far south as 60S and the eastern Atlantic Ocean. The largest total SO2 emission occurs over China and US, while SO2 emission per unit surface area is maximum over Germany and England. The largest total EC and OC emissions occur over China, but the largest OC emission per unit surface area occur over India. As a result, the maximum negative annual mean TOA direct forcing is over India and Germany. The surface annual-diurnal mean dimming over the regional hot spots is of the order of 10 W m 2 and 20 W m 2 over megacity hotpots.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Bringing the ocean into the laboratory to probe the chemical complexity of sea spray aerosol

Kimberly A. Prather; Timothy H. Bertram; Vicki H. Grassian; Grant B. Deane; M. Dale Stokes; Paul J. DeMott; Lihini I. Aluwihare; Brian Palenik; Farooq Azam; John H. Seinfeld; Ryan C. Moffet; Mario J. Molina; Christopher D. Cappa; Franz M. Geiger; G. C. Roberts; Lynn M. Russell; Andrew P. Ault; Jonas Baltrusaitis; Douglas B. Collins; C. E. Corrigan; Luis A. Cuadra-Rodriguez; Carlena J. Ebben; Sara Forestieri; Timothy L. Guasco; Scott Hersey; Michelle J. Kim; William Lambert; R. L. Modini; Wilton Mui; Byron E. Pedler

The production, size, and chemical composition of sea spray aerosol (SSA) particles strongly depend on seawater chemistry, which is controlled by physical, chemical, and biological processes. Despite decades of studies in marine environments, a direct relationship has yet to be established between ocean biology and the physicochemical properties of SSA. The ability to establish such relationships is hindered by the fact that SSA measurements are typically dominated by overwhelming background aerosol concentrations even in remote marine environments. Herein, we describe a newly developed approach for reproducing the chemical complexity of SSA in a laboratory setting, comprising a unique ocean-atmosphere facility equipped with actual breaking waves. A mesocosm experiment was performed in natural seawater, using controlled phytoplankton and heterotrophic bacteria concentrations, which showed SSA size and chemical mixing state are acutely sensitive to the aerosol production mechanism, as well as to the type of biological species present. The largest reduction in the hygroscopicity of SSA occurred as heterotrophic bacteria concentrations increased, whereas phytoplankton and chlorophyll-a concentrations decreased, directly corresponding to a change in mixing state in the smallest (60–180 nm) size range. Using this newly developed approach to generate realistic SSA, systematic studies can now be performed to advance our fundamental understanding of the impact of ocean biology on SSA chemical mixing state, heterogeneous reactivity, and the resulting climate-relevant properties.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Simultaneous observations of aerosol–cloud–albedo interactions with three stacked unmanned aerial vehicles

G. C. Roberts; Muvva Venkata Ramana; C. E. Corrigan; Dohyeong Kim; V. Ramanathan

Aerosol impacts on climate change are still poorly understood, in part, because the few observations and methods for detecting their effects are not well established. For the first time, the enhancement in cloud albedo is directly measured on a cloud-by-cloud basis and linked to increasing aerosol concentrations by using multiple autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles to simultaneously observe the cloud microphysics, vertical aerosol distribution, and associated solar radiative fluxes. In the presence of long-range transport of dust and anthropogenic pollution, the trade cumuli have higher droplet concentrations and are on average brighter. Our observations suggest a higher sensitivity of radiative forcing by trade cumuli to increases in cloud droplet concentrations than previously reported owing to a constrained droplet radius such that increases in droplet concentrations also increase cloud liquid water content. This aerosol-cloud forcing efficiency is as much as −60 W m−2 per 100% percent cloud fraction for a doubling of droplet concentrations and associated increase of liquid water content. Finally, we develop a strategy for detecting aerosol–cloud interactions based on a nondimensional scaling analysis that relates the contribution of single clouds to albedo measurements and illustrates the significance of characterizing cloud morphology in resolving radiometric measurements. This study demonstrates that aerosol–cloud–albedo interactions can be directly observed by simultaneous observations below, in, and above the clouds.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2015

Primary marine aerosol-cloud interactions off the coast of California

R. L. Modini; Amanda A. Frossard; Lars Ahlm; Lynn M. Russell; C. E. Corrigan; G. C. Roberts; Lelia N. Hawkins; J. C. Schroder; Allan K. Bertram; R. Zhao; Alex K. Y. Lee; J. P. D. Abbatt; Jack J. Lin; Athanasios Nenes; Zhen Wang; Anna Wonaschütz; Armin Sorooshian; Kevin J. Noone; Haflidi Jonsson; John H. Seinfeld; Desiree Toom-Sauntry; A. M. Macdonald; W. R. Leaitch

Primary marine aerosol (PMA)-cloud interactions off the coast of California were investigated using observations of marine aerosol, cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), and stratocumulus clouds during the Eastern Pacific Emitted Aerosol Cloud Experiment (E-PEACE) and the Stratocumulus Observations of Los-Angeles Emissions Derived Aerosol-Droplets (SOLEDAD) studies. Based on recently reported measurements of PMA size distributions, a constrained lognormal-mode-fitting procedure was devised to isolate PMA number size distributions from total aerosol size distributions and applied to E-PEACE measurements. During the 12 day E-PEACE cruise on the R/V Point Sur, PMA typically contributed less than 15% of total particle concentrations. PMA number concentrations averaged 12 cm^(−3) during a relatively calmer period (average wind speed 12 m/s^1) lasting 8 days, and 71 cm^(−3) during a period of higher wind speeds (average 16 m/s^1) lasting 5 days. On average, PMA contributed less than 10% of total CCN at supersaturations up to 0.9% during the calmer period; however, during the higher wind speed period, PMA comprised 5–63% of CCN (average 16–28%) at supersaturations less than 0.3%. Sea salt was measured directly in the dried residuals of cloud droplets during the SOLEDAD study. The mass fractions of sea salt in the residuals averaged 12 to 24% during three cloud events. Comparing the marine stratocumulus clouds sampled in the two campaigns, measured peak supersaturations were 0.2 ± 0.04% during E-PEACE and 0.05–0.1% during SOLEDAD. The available measurements show that cloud droplet number concentrations increased with >100 nm particles in E-PEACE but decreased in the three SOLEDAD cloud events.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Meteorological and aerosol effects on marine cloud microphysical properties

Kevin J. Sanchez; Lynn M. Russell; R. L. Modini; Amanda A. Frossard; Lars Ahlm; C. E. Corrigan; G. C. Roberts; Lelia N. Hawkins; J. C. Schroder; Allan K. Bertram; R. Zhao; Alex K. Y. Lee; Jack J. Lin; Athanasios Nenes; Zhuo Wang; Anna Wonaschütz; Armin Sorooshian; Kevin J. Noone; H. H. Jonsson; Desiree Toom; A. M. Macdonald; W. R. Leaitch; John H. Seinfeld

Meteorology and microphysics affect cloud formation, cloud droplet distributions, and shortwave reflectance. The Eastern Pacific Emitted Aerosol Cloud Experiment and the Stratocumulus Observations of Los-Angeles Emissions Derived Aerosol-Droplets studies provided measurements in six case studies of cloud thermodynamic properties, initial particle number distribution and composition, and cloud drop distribution. In this study, we use simulations from a chemical and microphysical aerosol-cloud parcel (ACP) model with explicit kinetic drop activation to reproduce observed cloud droplet distributions of the case studies. Four cases had subadiabatic lapse rates, resulting in fewer activated droplets, lower liquid water content, and higher cloud base height than an adiabatic lapse rate. A weighted ensemble of simulations that reflect measured variation in updraft velocity and cloud base height was used to reproduce observed droplet distributions. Simulations show that organic hygroscopicity in internally mixed cases causes small effects on cloud reflectivity (CR) (<0.01), except for cargo ship and smoke plumes, which increased CR by 0.02 and 0.07, respectively, owing to their high organic mass fraction. Organic hygroscopicity had larger effects on droplet concentrations for cases with higher aerosol concentrations near the critical diameter (namely, polluted cases with a modal peak near 0.1 mu m). Differences in simulated droplet spectral widths (k) caused larger differences in CR than organic hygroscopicity in cases with organic mass fractions of 60% or less for the cases shown. Finally, simulations from a numerical parameterization of cloud droplet activation suitable for general circulation models compared well with the ACP model, except under high organic mass fraction.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2006

Optical properties of soot–water drop agglomerates: An experimental study

E. F. Mikhailov; S. S. Vlasenko; I. A. Podgorny; V. Ramanathan; C. E. Corrigan


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

Capturing vertical profiles of aerosols and black carbon over the Indian Ocean using autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles

C. E. Corrigan; G. C. Roberts; Muvva Venkata Ramana; Dohyeong Kim; V. Ramanathan


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Trans‐Pacific transport of black carbon and fine aerosols (D < 2.5 μm) into North America

O. L. Hadley; V. Ramanathan; G. R. Carmichael; Youhua Tang; C. E. Corrigan; G. C. Roberts; G. S. Mauger


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Understanding the origin of black carbon in the atmospheric brown cloud over the Indian Ocean

Elizabeth A. Stone; Glynis C. Lough; James J. Schauer; Puppala S. Praveen; C. E. Corrigan; V. Ramanathan


Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2007

Albedo, atmospheric solar absorption and heating rate measurements with stacked UAVs

Muvva Venkata Ramana; V. Ramanathan; Dohyeong Kim; G. C. Roberts; C. E. Corrigan

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V. Ramanathan

University of California

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James J. Schauer

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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John H. Seinfeld

California Institute of Technology

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R. L. Modini

University of California

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Dohyeong Kim

Seoul National University

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