Abstract
After summarizing the time scales defining the change of the physical properties of spume and other droplets cast up from the sea surface, the time scales governing drop-atmosphere gas exchange are compared. Following a broad review of the spume drop production functions described in the literature, a subset of these functions is selected via objective criteria, to represent typical, upper bound, and lower bound production functions. Three complementary mechanisms driving spume-atmosphere gas exchange are described, and one is then used to estimate the relative importance, over a broad range of wind speeds, of this spume drop mechanism compared to the conventional, diffusional, sea surface mechanism in air-sea gas exchange. While remaining uncertainties in the wind dependence of the spume drop production flux, and in the immediate sea surface gas flux, preclude a definitive conclusion, the findings of this study strongly suggest that, at high wind speeds (>20 m s−1 for dimethyl sulfide and >30 m s−1 for gases such a carbon dioxide), spume drops do make a significant contribution to air-sea gas exchange.
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Monahan, E. C., Staniec, A., & Vlahos, P. (2017). Spume Drops: Their Potential Role in Air-Sea Gas Exchange. Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans, 122(12), 9500–9517. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017JC013293
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