Radiative forcing of the direct aerosol effect from AeroCom Phase II simulations
Author:
Myhre G.,Samset B. H.,Schulz M.,Balkanski Y.,Bauer S.,Berntsen T. K.,Bian H.,Bellouin N.,Chin M.,Diehl T.,Easter R. C.,Feichter J.,Ghan S. J.,Hauglustaine D.,Iversen T.,Kinne S.,Kirkevåg A.,Lamarque J.-F.,Lin G.,Liu X.,Luo G.,Ma X.,Penner J. E.,Rasch P. J.,Seland Ø.,Skeie R. B.,Stier P.,Takemura T.,Tsigaridis K.,Wang Z.,Xu L.,Yu H.,Yu F.,Yoon J.-H.,Zhang K.,Zhang H.,Zhou C.
Abstract
Abstract. We report on the AeroCom Phase II direct aerosol effect (DAE) experiment where 15 detailed global aerosol models have been used to simulate the changes in the aerosol distribution over the industrial era. All 15 models have estimated the radiative forcing (RF) of the anthropogenic DAE, and have taken into account anthropogenic sulphate, black carbon (BC) and organic aerosols (OA) from fossil fuel, biofuel, and biomass burning emissions. In addition several models have simulated the DAE of anthropogenic nitrate and anthropogenic influenced secondary organic aerosols (SOA). The model simulated all-sky RF of the DAE from total anthropogenic aerosols has a range from −0.58 to −0.02 W m−2, with a mean of −0.30 W m−2 for the 15 models. Several models did not include nitrate or SOA and modifying the estimate by accounting for this with information from the other AeroCom models reduces the range and slightly strengthens the mean. Modifying the model estimates for missing aerosol components and for the time period 1750 to 2010 results in a mean RF for the DAE of −0.39 W m−2. Compared to AeroCom Phase I (Schulz et al., 2006) we find very similar spreads in both total DAE and aerosol component RF. However, the RF of the total DAE is stronger negative and RF from BC from fossil fuel and biofuel emissions are stronger positive in the present study than in the previous AeroCom study. We find a tendency for models having a strong (positive) BC RF to also have strong (negative) sulphate or OA RF. This relationship leads to smaller uncertainty in the total RF of the DAE compared to the RF of the sum of the individual aerosol components. The spread in results for the individual aerosol components is substantial, and can be divided into diversities in burden, mass extinction coefficient (MEC), and normalized RF with respect to AOD. We find that these three factors give similar contributions to the spread in results.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Reference90 articles.
1. Adams, P. J., Seinfeld, J. H., Koch, D., Mickley, L., and Jacob, D.: General circulation model assessment of direct radiative forcing by the sulfate-nitrate-ammonium-water inorganic aerosol system, J. Geophys. Res.-Atmos., 106, 1097–1111, 2001. 2. Balkanski, Y.: L'Influence des Aérosols sur le Climat, Thèse d'Habilitation à Diriger des 871 Recherches Thesis, Université Versailles Saint Quentin, 2011. 3. Balkanski, Y., Schulz, M., Moulin, C., and Ginoux, P.: The formulation of dust emissions on global scale: formulation and validation using satellite retrievals. In: Emissions of Atmospheric Trace Compounds, edited by: Granier, C., Artaxo, P., and Reeves, C., Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht, The Netherlands, 239–267, 2004. 4. Bauer, S. E., Koch, D., Unger, N., Metzger, S. M., Shindell, D. T., and Streets, D. G.: Nitrate aerosols today and in 2030: a global simulation including aerosols and tropospheric ozone, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 7, 5043–5059, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-7-5043-2007, 2007. 5. Bauer, S. E., Wright, D. L., Koch, D., Lewis, E. R., McGraw, R., Chang, L.-S., Schwartz, S. E., and Ruedy, R.: MATRIX (Multiconfiguration Aerosol TRacker of mIXing state): an aerosol microphysical module for global atmospheric models, Atmos. Chem. Phys., 8, 6003–6035, https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-8-6003-2008, 2008.% SELFREFERENCE
Cited by
19 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|