Abstract
The Earth's climate is driven by surface incident solar radiation (R s). Direct measurements have shown that R s has undergone significant decadal variations. However, a large fraction of the global land surface is not covered by these observations. Satellite-derived R s has a good global coverage but is of low accuracy in its depiction of decadal variability. This paper shows that daily to decadal variations of R s, from both aerosols and cloud properties, can be accurately estimated using globally available measurements of Sunshine Duration (SunDu). In particular, SunDu shows that since the late 1980's R s has brightened over Europe due to decreases in aerosols but dimmed over China due to their increases. We found that variation of cloud cover determines R s at a monthly scale but that aerosols determine the variability of R s at a decadal time scale, in particular, over Europe and China. Because of its global availability and long-term history, SunDu can provide an accurate and continuous proxy record of R s, filling in values for the blank areas that are not covered by direct measurements. Compared to its direct measurement, R s from SunDu appears to be less sensitive to instrument replacement and calibration, and shows that the widely reported sharp increase in R s during the early 1990s in China was a result of instrument replacement. By merging direct measurements collected by Global Energy Budget Archive with those derived from SunDu, we obtained a good coverage of R s over the Northern Hemisphere. From this data, the average increase of R s from 1982 to 2008 is estimated to be 0.87 W mg-2 per decade. © 2012 Author(s).
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CITATION STYLE
Wang, K. C., Dickinson, R. E., Wild, M., & Liang, S. (2012). Atmospheric impacts on climatic variability of surface incident solar radiation. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(20), 9581–9592. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-12-9581-2012
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