scholarly journals The Shortwave Spectral Radiometer for Atmospheric Science: Capabilities and Applications from the ARM User Facility

Author(s):  
Laura D. Riihimaki ◽  
Connor Flynn ◽  
Allison McComiskey ◽  
Dan Lubin ◽  
Yann Blanchard ◽  
...  

CapsuleThe maturing of ground-based solar shortwave spectral measurements at the U.S. DOE ARM User Facility facilitates progress in climate predictability by constraining cloud and aerosol radiative effects in complex environments.

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tamanna Subba ◽  
Mukunda M. Gogoi ◽  
K. Krishna Moorthy ◽  
Pradip K. Bhuyan ◽  
Binita Pathak ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefan Kinne

Abstract. onthly global maps for aerosol properties of the MACv2 climatology are applied in an off-line radiative transfer model to determine aerosol radiative effects. For details beyond global averages in most cases global maps are presented to visualize regional and seasonal details. Aside from the direct radiative (aerosol presence) effect, including those for aerosol components as extracted from MACv2 aerosol optics, also the major aerosol indirect radiative effect is covered. Hereby, the impact of smaller drops in water clouds due to added anthropogenic aerosol was simulated by applying a satellite retrieval based fit from locally associations between aerosol and drop concentrations over oceans. Present-day anthropogenic aerosols of MACv2 – on a global average basis – reduce the radiative net-fluxes at the top of the atmosphere (TOA) by −1.0 W/m2 and at the surface by −2.1 W/m2. Direct cooling contributions are only about half of indirect contributions (−.35 vs −.65) at TOA, but about twice at the surface (−1.45 vs −.65), as solar absorption of the direct effect warms the atmosphere by +1.1 W/m2. Natural aerosols are on average less absorbing (for a relatively larger solar TOA cooling) and larger in size (now contributing with IR greenhouse warming). Thus, average TOA direct forcing efficiencies for total and anthropogenic aerosol happen to be similar: −11 W/m2/AOD at all-sky and −24 W/m2/AOD at clear-sky conditions. The present-day direct impact by all soot (BC) is globally averaged +0.55W/m2 and at least half of it should be attributed to anthropogenic sources. Hereby any accuracy of anthropogenic impacts, not just for soot, suffers from the limited access to a pre-industrial reference. Anthropogenic uncertainty has a particular strong impact on aerosol indirect effects, which dominate the (TOA) forcing. Accounting for uncertainties in the anthropogenic definition, present-day aerosol forcing is estimated to stay within the −0.7 to −1.6 W/m2 range, with a best estimate at −1 W/m2. Calculations with model predicted temporal changes to anthropogenic AOD indicate that qualitatively the anthropogenic aerosol forcing has not changed much over the last decades and is not likely to increase over the next decades, despite strong regional shifts. These regional shifts explain most solar insolation (brightening or dimming) trends that have been observed by ground-based radiation data.


2017 ◽  
Vol 154 ◽  
pp. 42-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian He ◽  
Timothy Glotfelty ◽  
Khairunnisa Yahya ◽  
Kiran Alapaty ◽  
Shaocai Yu

2016 ◽  
Vol 182 ◽  
pp. 232-242 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sumita Kedia ◽  
Ribu Cherian ◽  
Sahidul Islam ◽  
Subrata Kumar Das ◽  
Akshara Kaginalkar

2018 ◽  
Vol 172 ◽  
pp. 109-123 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shin-Young Park ◽  
Hyo-Jung Lee ◽  
Jeong-Eon Kang ◽  
Taehyoung Lee ◽  
Cheol-Hee Kim

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