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    Coupled Aerosol-Chemistry–Climate Twentieth-Century Transient Model Investigation: Trends in Short-Lived Species and Climate Responses

    Source: Journal of Climate:;2011:;volume( 024 ):;issue: 011::page 2693
    Author:
    Koch, Dorothy
    ,
    Bauer, Susanne E.
    ,
    Del Genio, Anthony
    ,
    Faluvegi, Greg
    ,
    McConnell, Joseph R.
    ,
    Menon, Surabi
    ,
    Miller, Ronald L.
    ,
    Rind, David
    ,
    Ruedy, Reto
    ,
    Schmidt, Gavin A.
    ,
    Shindell, Drew
    DOI: 10.1175/2011JCLI3582.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: he authors simulate transient twentieth-century climate in the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) GCM, with aerosol and ozone chemistry fully coupled to one another and to climate including a full dynamic ocean. Aerosols include sulfate, black carbon (BC), organic carbon, nitrate, sea salt, and dust. Direct and BC-snow-albedo radiative effects are included. Model BC and sulfur trends agree fairly well with records from Greenland and European ice cores and with sulfur deposition in North America; however, the model underestimates the sulfur decline at the end of the century in Greenland. Global BC effects peak early in the century (1940s); afterward the BC effects decrease at high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere but continue to increase at lower latitudes. The largest increase in aerosol optical depth occurs in the middle of the century (1940s?80s) when sulfate forcing peaks and causes global dimming. After this, aerosols decrease in eastern North America and northern Eurasia leading to regional positive forcing changes and brightening. These surface forcing changes have the correct trend but are too weak. Over the century, the net aerosol direct effect is ?0.41 W m?2, the BC-albedo effect is ?0.02 W m?2, and the net ozone forcing is +0.24 W m?2. The model polar stratospheric ozone depletion develops, beginning in the 1970s. Concurrently, the sea salt load and negative radiative flux increase over the oceans around Antarctica. Net warming over the century is modeled fairly well; however, the model fails to capture the dynamics of the observed midcentury cooling followed by the late century warming. Over the century, 20% of Arctic warming and snow?ice cover loss is attributed to the BC-albedo effect. However, the decrease in this effect at the end of the century contributes to Arctic cooling.To test the climate responses to sulfate and BC pollution, two experiments were branched from 1970 that removed all pollution sulfate or BC. Averaged over 1970?2000, the respective radiative forcings relative to the full experiment were +0.3 and ?0.3 W m?2; the average surface air temperature changes were +0.2° and ?0.03°C. The small impact of BC reduction on surface temperature resulted from reduced stability and loss of low-level clouds.
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      Coupled Aerosol-Chemistry–Climate Twentieth-Century Transient Model Investigation: Trends in Short-Lived Species and Climate Responses

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4213690
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    contributor authorKoch, Dorothy
    contributor authorBauer, Susanne E.
    contributor authorDel Genio, Anthony
    contributor authorFaluvegi, Greg
    contributor authorMcConnell, Joseph R.
    contributor authorMenon, Surabi
    contributor authorMiller, Ronald L.
    contributor authorRind, David
    contributor authorRuedy, Reto
    contributor authorSchmidt, Gavin A.
    contributor authorShindell, Drew
    date accessioned2017-06-09T16:39:43Z
    date available2017-06-09T16:39:43Z
    date copyright2011/06/01
    date issued2011
    identifier issn0894-8755
    identifier otherams-71762.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4213690
    description abstracthe authors simulate transient twentieth-century climate in the Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) GCM, with aerosol and ozone chemistry fully coupled to one another and to climate including a full dynamic ocean. Aerosols include sulfate, black carbon (BC), organic carbon, nitrate, sea salt, and dust. Direct and BC-snow-albedo radiative effects are included. Model BC and sulfur trends agree fairly well with records from Greenland and European ice cores and with sulfur deposition in North America; however, the model underestimates the sulfur decline at the end of the century in Greenland. Global BC effects peak early in the century (1940s); afterward the BC effects decrease at high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere but continue to increase at lower latitudes. The largest increase in aerosol optical depth occurs in the middle of the century (1940s?80s) when sulfate forcing peaks and causes global dimming. After this, aerosols decrease in eastern North America and northern Eurasia leading to regional positive forcing changes and brightening. These surface forcing changes have the correct trend but are too weak. Over the century, the net aerosol direct effect is ?0.41 W m?2, the BC-albedo effect is ?0.02 W m?2, and the net ozone forcing is +0.24 W m?2. The model polar stratospheric ozone depletion develops, beginning in the 1970s. Concurrently, the sea salt load and negative radiative flux increase over the oceans around Antarctica. Net warming over the century is modeled fairly well; however, the model fails to capture the dynamics of the observed midcentury cooling followed by the late century warming. Over the century, 20% of Arctic warming and snow?ice cover loss is attributed to the BC-albedo effect. However, the decrease in this effect at the end of the century contributes to Arctic cooling.To test the climate responses to sulfate and BC pollution, two experiments were branched from 1970 that removed all pollution sulfate or BC. Averaged over 1970?2000, the respective radiative forcings relative to the full experiment were +0.3 and ?0.3 W m?2; the average surface air temperature changes were +0.2° and ?0.03°C. The small impact of BC reduction on surface temperature resulted from reduced stability and loss of low-level clouds.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleCoupled Aerosol-Chemistry–Climate Twentieth-Century Transient Model Investigation: Trends in Short-Lived Species and Climate Responses
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume24
    journal issue11
    journal titleJournal of Climate
    identifier doi10.1175/2011JCLI3582.1
    journal fristpage2693
    journal lastpage2714
    treeJournal of Climate:;2011:;volume( 024 ):;issue: 011
    contenttypeFulltext
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