AEROgui: A Graphical User Interface for the Optical Properties of Aerosols

Author:

Pedrós R.1,Gómez-Amo J.L.2,Marcos C.R.1,Utrillas M.P.1,Gandía S.1,Tena F.1,Lozano J.A. Martinez1

Affiliation:

1. Solar Radiation Group, Earth Physics Department, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain

2. Solar Radiation Group, Earth Physics Department, University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain, and Laboratory of Earth Observations and Analyses, ENEA, Rome, Italy

Abstract

Atmospheric aerosols have an uncertain effect on climate and serious impacts on human health. The uncertainty in the aerosols' role on climate has several sources. First, aerosols have great spatial and temporal variability. The spatial variability arises from the fact that aerosols emitted in a certain place can travel thousands of kilometers, swept by the winds to modify the destination region's climate. The spatial variability also means that aerosols are inhomogeneously distributed in the vertical direction, which can lead to a differential effect on the energy balance depending on the aerosols' altitude. On the other hand, aerosols experience physical and chemical transformations in the time they spend in the atmosphere, commonly known as aging, which modifies its optical properties. These factors make necessary the use of two approaches for the study of the aerosol impact on climate: global aerosol models and satellite- and ground-based measurements. The disagreement between the estimates of the two approaches is the main cause of the climate uncertainty. One way to reduce climate uncertainty is to create new tools to simulate more realistic aerosol scenarios. We present a graphical user interface to obtain aerosol optical properties: extinction, scattering, and absorption coefficients; single-scattering albedo; asymmetry parameter; and aerosol optical depth. The tool can be used to obtain the optical properties of the external and internal mixture of several aerosol components. Interface outputs have successfully been compared to a black carbon plume and to aging mineral dust.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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