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Modeled and observed properties related to the direct aerosol radiative effect of biomass burning aerosol over the Southeast Atlantic

Authors :
Ian Chang
David Painemal
Pierre Nabat
Hamish Gordon
Jens Redemann
Gregory R. Carmichael
G. A. Ferrada
Amie Dobracki
Pablo E. Saide
Marc Mallet
Sharon P. Burton
Sarah J. Doherty
Robert Wood
Yohei Shinozuka
Calvin Howes
Kristina Pistone
Kerry Meyer
James R. Podolske
Steffen Freitag
Lan Gao
Steven G. Howell
Arlindo da Silva
Paquita Zuidema
Richard Ferrare
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Copernicus GmbH, 2021.

Abstract

Biomass burning smoke is advected over the southeast Atlantic Ocean between July and October of each year. This smoke plume overlies and mixes into a region of persistent low marine clouds. Model calculations of climate forcing by this plume vary significantly, in both magnitude and sign. The NASA EVS-2 (Earth Venture Suborbital-2) ORACLES (ObseRvations of Aerosols above CLouds and their intEractionS) project deployed for field campaigns off the west coast of Africa in three consecutive years (Sept., 2016; Aug., 2017; and Oct., 2018) with the goal of better characterizing this plume as a function of the monthly evolution, by measuring the parameters necessary to calculate the direct aerosol radiative effect. Here, this dataset and satellite retrievals of cloud properties are used to test the representation of the smoke plume and the underlying cloud layer in two regional models (WRF-CAM5 and CNRM-ALADIN) and two global models (GEOS and UM-UKCA). The focus is on comparisons of those aerosol and cloud properties that are the primary determinants of the direct aerosol radiative effect, and on the vertical distribution of the plume and its properties. The representativeness of the observations to monthly averages are tested for each field campaign, with the sampled mean aerosol light extinction generally found to be within 20 % of the monthly mean at plume altitudes. When compared to the observations, in all models the simulated plume is too vertically diffuse, has smaller vertical gradients, and, in two of the models (GEOS and UM-UKCA), the plume core is displaced lower than in the observations. Plume carbon monoxide, black carbon, and organic aerosol masses indicate under-estimates in modeled plume concentrations, leading in general to under-estimates in mid-visible aerosol extinction and optical depth. Biases in mid-visible single scatter albedo are both positive and negative across the models. Observed vertical gradients in single scatter albedo are not captured by the models, but the models do capture the coarse temporal evolution, correctly simulating higher values in October (2018) than in August (2018) and September (2017). Uncertainties in the measured absorption Ångstrom exponent were large but propagate into a negligible (

Details

ISSN :
16807324
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b562094fbb0987fabc3882172ee89dd1