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Issues in modeling the aerosol direct effects on climate

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Why do the surface forcing and atmosphere forcing oppose strongly ... F(S) outweighs F(A). Ramanathan, Chung et al. (2005) Drying Sahel! 1985-2002. observed trend ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Issues in modeling the aerosol direct effects on climate


1
Issues in modeling theaerosol direct effectson
climate
Chul Eddy Chung
Center for Cloud, Chemistry and Climate
(C4) Scripps Institution of Oceanography La
Jolla, California, USA
2
(IPCC report 2001)
3
INDOEX (Indian Ocean EXperiment) Aerosol
Radiative Forcing (W m-2) (Jan - March, 1999 0
- 20N)
-7.01
-2.02
-52.5
18.03

16.02
10.5
-232
-203
-63
Direct (Clear Sky)
Direct (Cloudy Sky)
First Indirect
(Ramanathan et al. 2001a)
4
Why do the surface forcing and atmosphere forcing
oppose strongly in South Asia and the Indian
Ocean?
(BC SSA 0.2)
(sulfate SSA 0.99)
(Ramanathan et al. 2001a)
5
Global mean vs. local impact
AA
(Ramanathan et al. 2001b)
6
Global anthropogenic aerosol forcing
estimate (2001-03) (Chung, Ramanathan, Kim and
Podgorny 2005)
Methodology 1) Integrate satellite and ground
based aerosol observations with GOCART model
outputs 2) Bring cloud observation from the
ISCCP and 2) Insert integrated global AOD,
SSA and asymmetry parameter into the MACR
(Monte-Carlo Aerosol Cloud Radiation) model.
7
Global anthropogenic aerosol forcing estimate for
the period 2001-03 (Chung, Ramanathan, Kim and
Podgorny 2005)
8
Other issues?
9
Vertical profile of aerosols and convective
precipitation
From Chung and Zhang (2004)
10
Typical PBL profile
Typical lifted profile
5
5
3 / 25 / 1999
2 / 16/ 1999
4
4
. C-130 (5.7N, 73.3E) Lidar
(4.2N,73.5E)
3
3
Ca
Altitude (km)
Cs
2
2
1
1
C-130 (4.2N, 73.5E)
0
0
50
100
150
0
-10
10
30
50
70
90
110
Cs, Ca (Mm-1)
Extinction Coefficient (Mm-1)
Idealized profiles for this study
670
700
Lifted profile
Altitude (hPa)
800
Uniform profile
850
PBL profile
Ps
0.7
Prescribed aerosol forcing (K/day)
11
Numerical experiment designs (Imposed
January-March South-Asian haze forcing)
12
January-March Ts change (CCM3)
13
Precipitation change (CCM3)
14
Understanding precipitation change CAPE
CAPE variation consists of two parts
contributions from the boundary layer (parcels)
changes and contributions from the free
tropospheric (parcels environment) changes
15
Low-level aerosol heating and dCAPE/dCAPEe
16
Spatial and seasonal variation of aerosol
radiative forcing
From Ramanathan, Chung et al. (2005), and Chung
and Ramanathan (2005)
17
An idealized S. Asian haze experiment with PCM
(Parallel Climate Model)
18
An improved S. Asian haze experiment with PCM
(Regional and temporal average from 1995 to 1999)
19
Latitudinal gradient (Longitudinal and temporal
average from 1995 to 1999)
20
ABC effects in 1985-2000 (60-100E streamline)
In winter, F(A) outweighs F(S).
In summer, F(S) outweighs F(A).
21
Ramanathan, Chung et al. (2005)
22
Drying Sahel!
23
1985-2002 observed trend
1951-2002 observed trend
24
Connection between Indian summer monsoon andN.
African summer monsoon
Monsoon dynamics explained by Webster and
Fascullo (2003)
25
(No Transcript)
26
AOD
SST (K)
Surface aerosol forcing Ramanathan et al. (2005)
FS (W/m2)
SST (K)
2001-02 mean
SST (K)
Hadley SST
1930-50 mean
27
Numerical experiments with the NCAR/CCM3
N
28
Precipitation change
29
SST gradient change vs. haze heating
30
500-300hPa vertical motion and surface
streamline (June-September)
31
Vertical motion and streamline at 10-20N
32
Greenhouse gas effects
1951-2002 observed trend
S. Asian haze effects
S. Asian haze effects
1985-2002 observed trend
1951-2002 observed trend
33
Conclusions
  1. Observations show that SSTs in the equatorial
    Indian Ocean have warmed by about 0.6 to 0.8 K
    since the 1950s, accompanied by very little
    warming or even a slight cooling trend over the
    northern Indian Ocean. The SST meridional
    gradient in N. Indian has been weakened in
    summer.
  2. The weakening of the meridional SST gradient in
    N. Indian Ocean alone leads to a large decrease
    in Indian rainfall during summer months, ranging
    from 2 to 3 mm/day (CCM3 experiments). The SST
    weakening also enhances rainfall in sub-Saharan
    Africa.
  3. The SST gradient change in this basin is likely
    due to anthropogenic aerosols in South Asia and
    the Indian Ocean.
  4. The overall S. Asian haze effects (SST gradient
    change aerosol radiative forcing) in CCM3 still
    produce drought in Indian and excess rainfall in
    Sahel.
  5. It is thus implicated that the South Asian haze
    has mitigated the Sahel desiccation considerably.

34
Sub-monthly fluctuations of aerosol radiative
forcing
From Chung (2005)
35
Issues
  1. Absorbing aerosols are another atmospheric
    diabatic heating source, and their distribution
    and amounts fluctuate as circulation and
    precipitation change.
  2. In modeling the climatic effects of aerosols,
    aerosols are either simulated or prescribed.
  3. When aerosols are simulated (i.e., coupling
    approach), the simulated aerosols inevitably
    differ from the observed due to the model
    deficiencies.
  4. In case of prescribed aerosols (off-line
    approach), aerosols do not affect climate on fine
    time scales.

36
Is it acceptable to use monthly aerosol
observations and prescribe them into a climate
model?
37
Methodology
  1. A tracer is added in the NCAR/CCM3. Aerosol
    emission at the surface was used for the source
    for the added tracer. Two cases are chosen
    Chinese haze and Indian haze.
  2. The aerosol wet deposition code by Rasch et al.
    (1997) was linked to the CCM3, as the sink for
    the added tracer.
  3. The enhancement of the atmospheric solar
    radiation by the added tracer was accounted for
    in the CCM3 solar radiation module.

38
Indian haze and CCM3 precipitation climatology
39
Chinese haze and CCM3 precipitation climatology
40
Interactive Indian haze
Interactive Chinese haze
41
Analysis of the Indian haze
42
(No Transcript)
43
Average forcing 0.31 K/day
interactive
steady
Average forcing 0.65 K/day
steady
interactive
44
(No Transcript)
45
Conclusions
  • Using monthly haze-induced diabatic heating does
    not produce sizable errors related to ignoring
    the sub-monthly fluctuations in the case of the
    Chinese haze. However, ignoring such sub-monthly
    scales leads to overestimation of the impacts of
    the haze heating on precipitation around India.
  • The Indian haze heating has 23 times higher
    precipitation increase efficiency than the
    Chinese haze heating.
  • Precipitation increase within the Chinese haze is
    totally irrelevant to the climatological
    precipitation

Implication
The climatic effects of tropical absorbing haze
need to be handled more carefully than those of
extratropical absorbing haze.
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