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Raimund Muscheler

Raimund Muscheler

Professor

Raimund Muscheler

Atmospheric transport and deposition of cosmogenic 36Cl using ECHAM6.3-HAM2.3 model

Author

  • Minjie Zheng
  • Raimund Muscheler
  • Florian Adolphi
  • Florian Mekhaldi
  • Zhengyao Lu
  • Mousong Wu
  • Arno Synal
  • Juerg Beer
  • Ulrike Lohmann

Summary, in English

The cosmogenic radionuclide 36Cl is a valuable tracer for studying Earth system processes, solar variability and geomagnetic field changes. These applications rely on a comprehensive understanding of 36Cl transport and deposition processes, which are still poorly studied. In this study, we apply a state-of-the-art climate model ECHAM6.3-HAM2.3 to investigate the source distribution and deposition of 36Cl. We configured 36Cl as gas in the stratosphere and as aerosol particles in the troposphere (E63H23CTL). Two sensitivity simulations were performed, with 36Cl configured solely as aerosol particles (E63H23AER) and solely as gas (E63H23GAS). The E63H23CTL simulation agrees well with global 36Cl measurements in terms of absolute values and temporal variability. E63H23AER significantly underestimates polar 36Cl deposition compared to measurements, E63H23CTL and E63H23GAS, suggesting that polar regions are more sensitive to the ³⁶Cl state (aerosol or gas phase) than other regions. This is most likely attributed to the predominance of mixed-phase clouds in the polar regions, which have a higher scavenging efficiency for gaseous 36Cl compared to aerosol-bound 36Cl. This is further supported by comparison with the other cosmogenic radionuclide 10Be, which is exclusively aerosol-bound. The stratospheric contribution is dominant (65–70 %) in 36Cl deposition in polar and subtropical regions, while stratospheric and tropospheric contributions are of similar size (50–51 %) in tropical regions. When responding to changes in solar modulation, 36Cl deposition varies proportionally to global production rate changes. However, as response to geomagnetic field changes, 36Cl shows latitudinal-dependent deposition enhancements/decreases (10–33 %) relative to global production rate changes. This deposition response is insensitive to the forms of 36Cl (gaseous or aerosol-bound) and is similar to that shown by 10Be. The result indicates that differences in transport and deposition between 10Be and 36Cl may play a minor role when jointly using these two radionuclides for geomagnetic and solar reconstructions.

Department/s

  • Department of Geology
  • MERGE: ModElling the Regional and Global Earth system
  • BECC: Biodiversity and Ecosystem services in a Changing Climate
  • Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science

Publishing year

2025-09

Language

English

Publication/Series

Earth and Planetary Science Letters

Volume

666

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Elsevier

Topic

  • Geology

Keywords

  • Be/Cl
  • Cl
  • Cosmogenic radionuclides
  • ECHAM6.3-HAM2.3
  • Transport and deposition

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0012-821X