Assessment of aerosol radiative forcing with 1-D radiative transfer modeling in the U. S. South-East

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Abstract

Aerosols and their radiative properties play an integral part in understanding Earth's climate. It is becoming increasingly common to examine aerosol's radiative impacts on a regional scale. The primary goal of this research is to explore the impacts of regional aerosol's forcing at the surface and top-of-atmosphere (TOA) in the south-eastern U.S. by using a 1-D radiative transfer model. By using test cases that are representative of conditions common to this region, an estimate of aerosol forcing can be compared to other results. Speciation data and aerosol layer analysis provide the basis for the modeling. Results indicate that the region experiences TOA cooling year-round, where the winter has TOA forcings between -2.8 and -5 W/m2, and the summer has forcings between -5 and -15 W/m2 for typical atmospheric conditions. Surface level forcing efficiencies are greater than those estimated for the TOA for all cases considered i.e., urban and non-urban background conditions. One potential implication of this research is that regional aerosol mixtures have effects that are not well captured in global climate model estimates, which has implications for a warming climate where all radiative inputs are not well characterized, thus increasing the ambiguity in determining regional climate impacts.

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APA

Alston, E. J., & Sokolik, I. N. (2018). Assessment of aerosol radiative forcing with 1-D radiative transfer modeling in the U. S. South-East. Atmosphere, 9(7). https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos9070271

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