direct radiative forcing
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MAUSAM ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 62 (4) ◽  
pp. 585-594
Author(s):  
S.M. SONBAWNE ◽  
P.C.S. DEVARA ◽  
R.C. REDDY ◽  
P.D. SAFAI ◽  
P.S. SALVEKAR

Aerosols are known to cause important effects on weather and climate of Polar Regions and their radiation balance of the polar surface-atmosphere system, especially in the regions characterized by high surface-reflectance conditions, which also prevails the heterogeneous chemistry of aerosols. Therefore, the knowledge of the aerosol physical and optical properties needs to be improved on both spatial and temporal scales. To characterize these physico-chemical and optical properties, studies have been carried out over both the polar regions [Antarctica (‘Maitri’ (70.76oS, 11.74oE) and Arctic “Himadri” (79°N, 11°E) during the summer period of 24th (2004-05), 26th (2006-07) Indian Antarctica Expedition, and during 14th Indian Arctic Expedition in 2010. Total column aerosol optical depth (AOD), ozone (TCO), precipitable water content (PWC), and direct radiative forcing using a multi-channel solar-radiometer (Microtops II); and short-wave global radiative flux using a wide-band pyranometer for their characteristics. In the Arctic, an Andersen Sampler, Black Carbon Aethalometer was also operated to determine the chemical properties of aerosols. The aerosol optical, physical and radiative properties, and their interface with simultaneously measured gases and their chemical composition have been investigated. The results showed that the daily mean AOD at a characteristic wavelength of 500 nm was found to be 0.042 with an average Angstrom coefficient of 0.24, revealing abundance of coarse-mode particles in Antarctica, and Arctic average AOD was observed 0.11 with an average Angstrom coefficient of 2.84, suggesting fine-mode particles. The TCO measured by the surface-based ozone monitor matched reasonably within 5% with that of the Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS) satellite sensor. Variability in ozone on daily scale, during the study period, was less than 4% over the Antarctica region and more or less same for Arctic. The January 2005 fluxes were found to be less by about 20% as compared to those in February 2005. The average short-wave direct radiative forcing due to aerosols showed cooling at the surface with an average value of -0.47 W/m2 during the study period. In this paper, we briefly describe the equipment deployed, data archival, their analysis techniques and salient results obtained over the Indian polar stations, ‘Maitri’ and ‘Himadri’.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bernd Heinold ◽  
Holger Baars ◽  
Boris Barja ◽  
Matthew Christensen ◽  
Anne Kubin ◽  
...  

Abstract. More than 1 Tg smoke aerosol was emitted into the atmosphere by the exceptional 2019–2020 Southeast Australian wildfires. Triggered by the extreme fire heat, several deep pyroconvective events carried the smoke directly into the stratosphere. Once there, smoke aerosol remained airborne considerably longer than in lower atmospheric layers. The thick plumes traveled eastward thereby being distributed across the high and mid-latitude Southern Hemisphere enhancing the atmospheric opacity. Due to the increased atmospheric lifetime of the smoke plume its radiative effect increased compared to smoke that remains lower altitudes. Global models describing aerosol-climate impacts show significant uncertainties regarding the emission height of aerosols from intense wildfires. Here, we demonstrate by combination of aerosol-climate modeling and lidar observations the importance of the representation of those high-altitude fire smoke layers for estimating the atmospheric energy budget. In this observation-based approach, the Australian wildfire emissions by pyroconvection are explicitly prescribed to the lower stratosphere in different scenarios. The 2019–2020 Australian fires caused a significant top-of-atmosphere hemispheric instantaneous direct radiative forcing signal that reached a magnitude comparable to the radiative forcing induced by anthropogenic absorbing aerosol. Up to +0.50 W m−2 instantaneous direct radiative forcing was modeled at top of the atmosphere, averaged for the Southern Hemisphere for January to March 2020 under all-sky conditions. While at the surface, an instantaneous solar radiative forcing of up to −0.81 W m−2 was found for clear-sky conditions, depending on the model configuration. Since extreme wildfires are expected to occur more frequently in the rapidly changing climate, our findings suggest that deep wildfire plumes must be adequately considered in climate projections in order to obtain reasonable estimates of atmospheric energy budget changes.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (7) ◽  
pp. 4879-4891
Author(s):  
Jie Qiu ◽  
Wangshu Tan ◽  
Gang Zhao ◽  
Yingli Yu ◽  
Chunsheng Zhao

Abstract. The aerosol scattering coefficient is an essential parameter for estimating aerosol direct radiative forcing and can be measured by nephelometers. Nephelometers are problematic due to small errors of nonideal Lambetian light source and angle truncation. Hence, the observed raw scattering coefficient data need to be corrected. In this study, based on the random forest machine learning model and taking Aurora 3000 as an example, we have proposed a new method to correct the scattering coefficient measurements of a three-wavelength nephelometer under different relative humidity conditions. The result shows that the empirical corrected values match Mie-calculation values very well at all three wavelengths and under all of the measured relative humidity conditions, with more than 85 % of the corrected values having less than 2 % error. The correction method obtains a scattering coefficient with high accuracy and there is no need for additional observation data.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xinrui Liu ◽  
Xiaodong Zhang ◽  
Yufei Huang ◽  
Kaijie Chen ◽  
Linfei Wang ◽  
...  

Atmosphere ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (4) ◽  
pp. 463
Author(s):  
Jiemei Liu ◽  
Wenxiang Shen ◽  
Yuan Yuan ◽  
Shikui Dong

This study considers aerosol optical properties and direct radiative forcing over Harbin (126.63° E, 45.75° N), the highest latitude city in Northeast China, during 2017. Observations based on the CE-318 sun-photometer show that the annual mean values of the aerosol optical depth (AOD) at 500 nm and the Angstrom exponent (AE) at 440–870 nm over Harbin are respectively 0.26 ± 0.20 and 1.36 ± 0.26. Aerosol loading is the highest in the spring followed by winter, and the lowest loading is in autumn. AE440–870 is the highest in summer, second highest in winter, and lowest in autumn. The Santa Barbara DISORT Atmospheric Radiative Transfer (SBDART) model is used to estimate the shortwave aerosol radiative forcing at the top of the atmosphere, on the Earth’s surface and in the atmosphere, and the annual mean values are −16.36 ± 18.42 Wm−2, −71.01 ± 27.37 Wm−2 and 54.65 ± 30.62 Wm−2, respectively, which indicate that aerosols cause climate effects of cooling the earth-atmosphere system, cooling the earth’s surface and heating the atmosphere. Four main aerosol types in Harbin are classified via AOD and AE. Specifically, clean continental, mixed type, biomass burning and urban industry, and desert dust aerosols accounted for 51%, 38%, 9%, and 2% of the total, respectively. Aerosol radiative forcing varies greatly in different seasons, and the aerosol load and type from different emission sources have an important influence on the seasonal variation of radiative forcing.


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