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Featured researches published by Sai-Chun Tan.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Variability in the Correlation between Asian Dust Storms and Chlorophyll a Concentration from the North to Equatorial Pacific

Sai-Chun Tan; Xiaohong Yao; Huiwang Gao; Guangyu Shi; Xu Yue

A long-term record of Asian dust storms showed seven high-occurrence-frequency centers in China. The intrusion of Asian dust into the downwind seas, including the China seas, the Sea of Japan, the subarctic North Pacific, the North Pacific subtropical gyre, and the western and eastern Equatorial Pacific, has been shown to add nutrients to ocean ecosystems and enhance their biological activities. To explore the relationship between the transported dust from various sources to the six seas and oceanic biological activities with different nutrient conditions, the correlation between monthly chlorophyll a concentration in each sea and monthly dust storm occurrence frequencies reaching the sea during 1997–2007 was examined in this study. No correlations were observed between dust and chlorophyll a concentration in the <50 m China seas because atmospheric deposition is commonly believed to exert less impact on coastal seas. Significant correlations existed between dust sources and many sea areas, suggesting a link between dust and chlorophyll a concentration in those seas. However, the correlation coefficients were highly variable. In general, the correlation coefficients (0.54–0.63) for the Sea of Japan were highest, except for that between the subarctic Pacific and the Taklimakan Desert, where it was as high as 0.7. For the >50 m China seas and the North Pacific subtropical gyre, the correlation coefficients were in the range 0.32–0.57. The correlation coefficients for the western and eastern Equatorial Pacific were relatively low (<0.36). These correlation coefficients were further interpreted in terms of the geographical distributions of dust sources, the transport pathways, the dust deposition, the nutrient conditions of oceans, and the probability of dust storms reaching the seas.


Science of The Total Environment | 2019

The distributions and direct radiative effects of marine aerosols over East Asia in springtime

Jiawei Li; Zhiwei Han; Xiaohong Yao; Zuxin Xie; Sai-Chun Tan

The characteristics, distributions, and direct radiative effects (DRE) of marine aerosols in the western Pacific Ocean over East Asia during the period from 17 March to 22 April 2014 were investigated by an online-coupled regional atmospheric chemistry/aerosol-climate model RIEMS-Chem (Regional Integrated Environmental Model System with Chemistry). The emissions and relevant processes of sea salt, marine primary organic aerosol (MPOA), sulfate and Methyl sulfonic acid (MSA) produced from dimethylsulfide (DMS) were parameterized and coupled with RIEMS-Chem. The model results for total aerosol masses (PM10 and PM2.5), inorganic and carbonaceous aerosols, gas precursors, and aerosol optical depth (AOD) were compared with various observational data sets including a research cruise Dongfanghong II from the Yellow Sea to the open oceans, near-surface aerosol and gas concentrations from the Acid Deposition Monitoring Network in East Asia (EANET) and China National Environmental Monitoring Center (CNEMC), and AOD from the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET). Model comparisons demonstrated a generally good skill of the RIEMS-Chem in representing the temporal and spatial variations of these variables. The distributions of marine aerosols were characterized by the maximum sea salt concentration up to 70 μg m-3 in the ocean northeast of Japan, the maximum concentration of MPOA >2 μg m-3 in the East China Sea and in portions of the northwest Pacific (NWP) region, and the maximum DMS-produced aerosol concentration >0.3 μg m-3 in the southern parts of the ocean. It was noteworthy that marine aerosols can be easily transported to the inland areas of south China. The clear-sky DREs by sea salt ranging from -9 to -17 W/m2 occurred in the open oceans northeast of Japan, comparable to the DREs of -10 ~ -20 W/m2 by anthropogenic aerosols, whereas the DREs by MPOA were strongest (up to -1.3 Wm-2) in the East China Sea and the oceans northeast of Japan due to active phytoplankton blooms there and comparable in magnitude to the DREs by sea salt (around -3 Wm-2) in the East China Sea. The maximum DRE by the DMS-produced aerosols was -0.4 Wm-2 mainly in the northern parts of the South China Sea. Sea salt exhibited an increasing radiative importance from the China marginal seas to the open oceans, accounting for 10% and 33% of the DREs by all aerosols, respectively. Under all-sky conditions, the sum of DREs by all the marine aerosols were estimated to be -2.2 W/m2, -3.5 W/m2, -2.3 W/m2, and -4.3 W/m2 averaged over the entire domain, ocean, East China Sea, and the NWP region, accounting for 20%, 27%, 13%, and 36% of the DREs by all aerosols, respectively, which demonstrated the important role of marine aerosols in modulating shortwave radiation in springtime in the western Pacific Ocean which was just downwind of the Asian continent with large amounts of anthropogenic and dust emissions.


Atmospheric Environment | 2014

A multisource observation study of the severe prolonged regional haze episode over eastern China in January 2013

Hong Wang; Sai-Chun Tan; Yu Wang; Chao Jiang; Guangyu Shi; Meng-Xiang Zhang; Huizheng Che


Atmospheric Environment | 2012

Long-range transport of spring dust storms in Inner Mongolia and impact on the China seas

Sai-Chun Tan; Guangyu Shi; Hong Wang


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Correlation of Asian dust with chlorophyll and primary productivity in the coastal seas of China during the period from 1998 to 2008

Sai-Chun Tan; Guangyu Shi; Jinhui Shi; Huiwang Gao; Xiaohong Yao


Atmospheric Environment | 2011

A study of air pollution of city clusters

Huiwang Gao; Jing Chen; Bin Wang; Sai-Chun Tan; Colin M. Lee; Xiaohong Yao; Han Yan; J.H. Shi


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2014

Mesoscale modelling study of the interactions between aerosols and PBL meteorology during a haze episode in China Jing–Jin–Ji and its near surrounding region – Part 2: Aerosols' radiative feedback effects

Handong Wang; Guangyu Shi; X. Y. Zhang; Sunling Gong; Sai-Chun Tan; Bin Chen; Huizheng Che; Tim Li


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2012

Examination of causative link between a spring bloom and dry/wet deposition of Asian dust in the Yellow Sea, China

Jinhui Shi; Huiwang Gao; Jing Zhang; Sai-Chun Tan; Jing‐Ling Ren; Cheng-Gang Liu; Ying Liu; Xiaohong Yao


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2013

Concentration, solubility and deposition flux of atmospheric particulate nutrients over the Yellow Sea

Jinhui Shi; Jing Zhang; Huiwang Gao; Sai-Chun Tan; Xiaohong Yao; Jing-Ling Ren


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2009

Spatiotemporal variability of satellite-derived primary production in the South China Sea, 1998–2006

Sai-Chun Tan; Guangyu Shi

Collaboration


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Guangyu Shi

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Xiaohong Yao

Ocean University of China

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Huiwang Gao

Ocean University of China

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Hong Wang

China Meteorological Administration

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Huizheng Che

China Meteorological Administration

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Jiawei Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jinhui Shi

Chinese Ministry of Education

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Bin Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jing Zhang

East China Normal University

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Chao Jiang

Nanjing University of Information Science and Technology

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