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Dive into the research topics where Fabio Giardi is active.

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Featured researches published by Fabio Giardi.


Rendiconti Lincei-scienze Fisiche E Naturali | 2016

Evolution of the Svalbard annual snow layer during the melting phase

Andrea Spolaor; Elena Barbaro; Jean Marc Christille; Torben Kirchgeorg; Fabio Giardi; David Cappelletti; Clara Turetta; Andrea Bernagozzi; Mats P. Björkman; Enzo Bertolini; Carlo Barbante

Understanding and monitoring the evolution of annual snow is an important aspect of cryosphere research. Changes in physical proprieties such as hardness, presence of melt layers, or the shape and size of crystals can completely modify the robustness, propriety and quality of the snow. Evaluating these changes can inform the study and prediction of avalanches. The annual snow layer is also a sink for several compounds and elements. In the polar environment, many compounds can be accumulated during winter depositions, especially during the polar night. During the spring, the combination of solar radiation and the melting of annual snow can release these compounds and elements into the atmosphere and groundwater. An in-depth investigation of the evolution of the first meter of the annual snow layer was conducted in the glacier of Austre Brøggerbreen, Svalbard, between the 27th of March and the 31st of May, in concomitance with the start of the melting phase. The present monitoring study mainly aimed to evaluate changes in the thermal profile and water content during the formation of a new ice layer as well as the re-allocation of the total dissolved salts in the different snow layers.


Chemosphere | 2017

Multi-year record of atmospheric and snow surface nitrate in the central Antarctic plateau

Rita Traversi; Silvia Becagli; Marco Brogioni; Laura Caiazzo; V. Ciardini; Fabio Giardi; Michel Legrand; Giovanni Macelloni; Boyan Petkov; S. Preunkert; Claudio Scarchilli; Mirko Severi; Vito Vitale; Roberto Udisti

Continuous all year-round samplings of atmospheric aerosol and surface snow at high (daily to 4-day) resolution were carried out at Dome C since 2004-05 to 2013 and nitrate records are here presented. Basing on a larger statistical data set than previous studies, results confirm that nitrate seasonal pattern is characterized by maxima during austral summer for both aerosol and surface snow, occurring in-phase with solar UV irradiance. This temporal pattern is likely due to a combination of nitrate sources and post-depositional processes whose intensity usually enhances during the summer. Moreover, it should be noted that a case study of the synoptic conditions, which took place during a major nitrate event, showed the occurrence of a stratosphere-troposphere exchange. The sampling of both matrices at the same time with high resolution allowed the detection of a an about one-month long recurring lag of summer maxima in snow with respect to aerosol. This result can be explained by deposition and post-deposition processes occurring at the atmosphere-snow interface, such as a net uptake of gaseous nitric acid and a replenishment of the uppermost surface layers driven by a larger temperature gradient in summer. This hypothesis was preliminarily tested by a comparison with surface layers temperature data in the 2012-13 period. The analysis of the relationship between the nitrate concentration in the gas phase and total nitrate obtained at Dome C (2012-13) showed the major role of gaseous HNO3 to the total nitrate budget suggesting the need to further investigate the gas-to-particle conversion processes.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

Spatial and temporal variability of snow chemical composition and accumulation rate at Talos Dome site (East Antarctica).

Laura Caiazzo; Silvia Becagli; Daniele Frosini; Fabio Giardi; Mirko Severi; Rita Traversi; Roberto Udisti

Five snow pits and five firn cores were sampled during the 2003-2004 Italian Antarctic Campaign at Talos Dome (East Antarctica), where a deep ice core (TALDICE, TALos Dome Ice CorE, 1650m depth) was drilled in 2005-2008 and analyzed for ionic content. Particular attention is spent in applying decontamination procedures to the firn cores, as core sections were stored for approximately 10years before analysis. By considering the snow pit samples to be unperturbed, the comparison with firn core samples from the same location shows that ammonium, nitrate and MSA are affected by storage post-depositional losses. All the other measured ions are confirmed to be irreversibly deposited in the snow layer. The removal of the most external layers (few centimeters) from the firn core sections is proved to be an effective decontamination procedure. High-resolution profiles of seasonal markers (nitrate, sulfate and MSA) allow a reliable stratigraphic dating and a seasonal characterization of the samples. The calculated mean accumulation-rate values range from 70 to 85mmw.e.year(-1), in the period 2003-1973 with small differences between two sectors: 70-74mmw.e.year(-1) in the NNE sector (spanning 2003-1996years) and 81-92mmw.e.year(-1) in the SSW sector (spanning 2003-1980years). This evidence is interpreted as a coupled effect of wind-driven redistribution processes in accumulation/ablation areas. Statistical treatment applied to the concentration values of the snow pits and firn cores samples collected in different points reveals a larger temporal variability than spatial one both in terms of concentration of chemical markers and annual accumulation. The low spatial variability of the accumulation rate and chemical composition measured in the five sites demonstrates that the TALDICE ice core paleo-environmental and paleo-climatic stratigraphies can be considered as reliably representative for the Talos Dome area.


Chemosphere | 2017

Sea salt sodium record from Talos Dome (East Antarctica) as a potential proxy of the Antarctic past sea ice extent

Mirko Severi; Silvia Becagli; Laura Caiazzo; V. Ciardini; Ester Colizza; Fabio Giardi; K. Mezgec; Claudio Scarchilli; Barbara Stenni; Elizabeth R. Thomas; Rita Traversi; Roberto Udisti

Antarctic sea ice has shown an increasing trend in recent decades, but with strong regional differences from one sector to another of the Southern Ocean. The Ross Sea and the Indian sectors have seen an increase in sea ice during the satellite era (1979 onwards). Here we present a record of ssNa+ flux in the Talos Dome region during a 25-year period spanning from 1979 to 2003, showing that this marker could be used as a potential proxy for reconstructing the sea ice extent in the Ross Sea and Western Pacific Ocean at least for recent decades. After finding a positive relationship between the maxima in sea ice extent for a 25-year period, we used this relationship in the TALDICE record in order to reconstruct the sea ice conditions over the 20th century. Our tentative reconstruction highlighted a decline in the sea ice extent (SIE) starting in the 1950s and pointed out a higher variability of SIE starting from the 1960s and that the largest sea ice extents of the last century occurred during the 1990s.


Aerosol Science and Technology | 2017

A practical set of miniaturized instruments for vertical profiling of aerosol physical properties

Hagen Telg; D. M. Murphy; T. S. Bates; J. E. Johnson; Patricia K. Quinn; Fabio Giardi; R. S. Gao

ABSTRACT In situ atmospheric aerosol measurements have been performed from a Manta unmanned aircraft system (UAS) using recently developed miniaturized aerosol instruments. Flights were conducted up to an altitude of 3000 m (AMSL) during spring 2015 in Ny-Ålesund, Svalbard, Norway. We use these flights to demonstrate a practical set of miniaturized instruments that can be deployed onboard small UASs and can provide valuable information on ambient aerosol. Measured properties include size-resolved particle number concentrations, aerosol absorption coefficient, relative humidity, and direct sun intensity. From these parameters, it is possible to derive a comprehensive set of aerosol optical properties: aerosol optical depth, single scattering albedo, and asymmetry parameter. The combination of instruments also allows us to determine the aerosol hygroscopicity. Copyright


Science of The Total Environment | 2018

Determination of Rare Earth Elements in multi-year high-resolution Arctic aerosol record by double focusing Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry with desolvation nebulizer inlet system

Fabio Giardi; Rita Traversi; Silvia Becagli; Mirko Severi; Laura Caiazzo; Claudia Ancillotti; Roberto Udisti

An inductively coupled plasma sector field mass spectrometer (ICP-SFMS) was used to develop an analytical method for the fast determination of Na, Al, Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, As, Y, Mo, Cd, Ba, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu, and Pb in Arctic size-segregated aerosol samples (PM10), after microwave acidic digestion. The ICP-SFMS was coupled with a microflow nebulizer and a desolvation system for the sample introduction, which reduced the isobaric interferences due to oxides and the required volume of sample solutions, compared to the usual nebulization chamber methods. With its very low limit of detection, and taking into account the level of blanks, this method allowed the quantification of many metals in very low concentration. Particular attention was given to Rare Earth Elements (REEs - La to Lu). The efficiency in the extraction of REEs was proved to be acceptable, with recoveries over 83% obtained with a Certified Reference Material (AMiS 0356). The analytical method was then applied to particulate matter samples, collected at ground level in Ny Ålesund (Svalbard Islands, Norway), during spring and summer, from 2010 to 2015, with daily resolution and using a low-volume device. Thus, for the first time, a large atmospheric concentrations dataset of metals in Arctic particulate matter at high temporal resolution is presented. On the basis of differences in LREE/HREE ratio and Ce and Eu anomalies in spring and summer samples, basic information to distinguish local and long-range transported dust were achieved.


Rendiconti Lincei-scienze Fisiche E Naturali | 2016

Sulfate source apportionment in the Ny-Ålesund (Svalbard Islands) Arctic aerosol

Roberto Udisti; Andrea Bazzano; Silvia Becagli; Ezio Bolzacchini; Laura Caiazzo; David Cappelletti; L. Ferrero; Daniele Frosini; Fabio Giardi; Marco Grotti; Angelo Lupi; Mery Malandrino; Mauro Mazzola; Beatrice Moroni; Mirko Severi; Rita Traversi; Angelo Viola; Vito Vitale


Atmospheric Environment | 2016

Relationships linking primary production, sea ice melting, and biogenic aerosol in the Arctic

Silvia Becagli; Luigi Lazzara; Christian Marchese; Uri Dayan; Svend Erik Ascanius; Marco Cacciani; Laura Caiazzo; C. Di Biagio; T. Di Iorio; A. di Sarra; Paul Eriksen; Fabiola Fani; Fabio Giardi; D. Meloni; Giovanni Muscari; G. Pace; Mirko Severi; Rita Traversi; Roberto Udisti


Food Chemistry | 2016

Polyphenolic profiles and antioxidant and antiradical activity of Italian berries from Vaccinium myrtillus L. and Vaccinium uliginosum L. subsp. gaultherioides (Bigelow) S.B. Young

Claudia Ancillotti; Lorenzo Ciofi; Daniele Pucci; Eva Sagona; Edgardo Giordani; Stefano Biricolti; Massimo Gori; William Antonio Petrucci; Fabio Giardi; Riccardo Bartoletti; Ugo Chiuminatto; Serena Orlandini; Stefano Mosti; Massimo Del Bubba


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2016

Vertical profiles of aerosol and black carbon in the Arctic: a seasonalphenomenology along 2 years (2011–2012) of field campaigns

L. Ferrero; David Cappelletti; Maurizio Busetto; Mauro Mazzola; Angelo Lupi; Christian Lanconelli; Silvia Becagli; Rita Traversi; Laura Caiazzo; Fabio Giardi; Beatrice Moroni; Stefano Crocchianti; Martin Fierz; Griša Močnik; G Sangiorgi; Maria Grazia Perrone; Marion Maturilli; Vito Vitale; Roberto Udisti; Ezio Bolzacchini

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Vito Vitale

National Research Council

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Angelo Lupi

National Research Council

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