Relationship between erythema effective UV radiant exposure, total ozone, cloud cover and aerosols in southern England, UK
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Published:2019-01-17
Issue:1
Volume:19
Page:683-699
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Hunter Nezahat, Rendell Rebecca J.ORCID, Higlett Michael P., O'Hagan John B.ORCID, Haylock Richard G. E.
Abstract
Abstract. Evidence of an underlying trend in the dependence of erythema effective ultraviolet
(UV) radiant exposure (Her) on changes in the total ozone, cloud cover and
aerosol optical depth (AOD) has been studied using solar ultraviolet
radiation measurements collected over a 25-year period (1991–2015) at Chilton
in the south of England in the UK. The monthly mean datasets of these measures corrected for underlying
seasonal variation were analysed. When a single linear trend was fitted over
the whole study period between 1991 and 2015, the analyses revealed that the
long-term variability of Her can be best characterised in two
sub-periods (1991–2004 and 2004–2015), where the estimated linear trend was
upward in the first period (1991–2004) but downward in the second period
(2004–2015). Both cloud cover (CC) and total ozone (TO) were found to have a highly
statistically significant influence on Her, but the influence of the
AOD measure was very small. The radiation amplification factor (RAF) for the
erythema action spectrum due to TO was −1.03 at constant levels of CC over
the whole study period; that is, for a 1.0 % increase in TO, Her
decreases by 1.03 %. Over the first period (1991–2004), the RAF related to
CC was slightly higher at 0.97 compared to that for TO at 0.79. The
proportion of the change in Her explained by the change in CC (47 %)
was much greater than the proportion explained by changes in TO (8 %). For
the second period (2004–2015), the pattern reversed, with the observed RAF
related to TO being −1.25, almost double that of CC (−0.65). Furthermore, in
this period the proportion of variation in Her explained by TO
variation was 33 %, double that of CC at 16 %, while AOD changes had a
negligible effect (1 %). When the data were examined separately for each season, for the first period
(1991–2004) the greatest effect of TO and CC on Her (i.e. the largest
RAF value) was found during spring. Spring was also the season during which TO and
CC variation explained the greatest proportion of variability in Her
(82 %). In the later period (2004–2015), the RAF and greatest
influence of TO and CC were observed in winter (67 %) and the AOD effect
explained a further 5 % variability in Her. This study provides evidence that both the increasing trend in Her for
1991–2004 and the decreasing trend in Her for 2004–2015 occur in
response to variation in TO, which exhibits a small increasing tendency over
these periods. CC plays a more important role in the increasing trend in
Her for 1991–2004 than TO, whereas for 2004–2015, the decreasing trend
in Her is less associated with changes in CC and AOD.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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