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Improved understanding of aerosol processes using satellite observations of aerosol optical properties

Atmospheric aerosols are the largest remaining uncertainty in the Earth’s radiative budget and it is important that we improve our knowledge of aerosol processes if we are to understand current radiative forcing and accurately project changes in future climate. Aerosols affect the radiation balance directly through the absorption and scattering of incoming solar radiation and indirectly through the modification of cloud microphysical properties. Understanding aerosol forcing remains challenging due to the short atmospheric residence time of aerosols resulting in large spatial and temporal heterogeneity in aerosol loading and chemical composition. Satellite retrievals are becoming increasingly important to improving our knowledge of aerosol forcing. They provide regular global data at finer spatial and temporal resolution than available through sparse groundbased point measurements or localised aircraft campaigns, but cannot unambiguously determine aerosol speciation, relying heavily on a priori assumptions. In this thesis I use data from two satellite instruments: the Along Track Scanning Radiometer 2 (ATSR-2) and the Spinning Enhanced Visible and InfraRed Imager (SEVIRI) interpreted using the Oxford-RAL Aerosol and Cloud (ORAC) retrieval scheme in three pieces of interrelated work. First I use satellite observations of aerosol optical depth a and cloud particle effective radius re from the ATSR-2 instrument in 1997 to investigate the Twomey indirect effect (IE, -δ ln re /δ ln τa) in regions of continental outflow. I generally find a negative correlation between τa and re with the strongest inverse relationships downwind of Africa. North America and eastern Asian continental outflow exhibits a strong seasonal dependence, as expected. Global values for IE range from 0.10 to 0.16, consistent with theoretical predictions. Downwind of Africa, I find that the IE is unphysically high but robust (r = −0.85) during JJA associated with high aerosol loading, and attribute this tentatively to the Twomey hypothesis accounting only for a limited number of physical properties of aerosols. Second, I test the response of the Oxford-RAL Aerosol and Cloud (ORAC) retrieval algorithm for MSG SEVIRI to changes in the aerosol properties used in the dust aerosol model, using data from the Dust Outflow and Deposition to the Ocean (DODO) flight campaign in August 2006. I find that using the observed DODO free tropospheric aerosol size distribution and refractive index compared with the dust aerosol properties from the Optical Properties of Aerosol and Cloud (OPAC) package, increases simulated top of the atmosphere radiance at 0.55 μm assuming a fixed aerosol optical depth of 0.5, by 10–15%, reaching a maximum difference at low solar zenith angles. This difference is sensitive to changes in AOD, increasing by ~2–4% between AOD of 0.4–0.6. I test the sensitivity of the retrieval to the vertical distribution of the aerosol and find that this is unimportant in determining simulated radiance at 0.55 μm. I also test the ability of the ORAC retrieval when used to produce the GlobAerosol dataset to correctly identify continental aerosol outflow from the African continent and I find that it poorly constrains aerosol speciation. I develop spatially and temporally resolved prior distributions of aerosols to inform the retrieval which incorporates five aerosol models: desert dust, maritime, biomass burning, urban and continental. I use a Saharan Dust Index and the GEOS-Chem chemistry transport model to describe dust and biomass burning aerosol outflow, and compare AOD using my speciation against the GlobAerosol retrieval during January and July 2006. I find AOD discrepancies of 0.2–1 over regions of biomass burning outflow, where AOD from my aerosol speciation and the GlobAerosol speciation can differ by as much as 50 - 70 %. Finally I use satellite observations of aerosol optical depth and cloud fraction from the MSG SEVIRI instrument to investigate the semi-direct effect of Saharan dust aerosol on marine stratocumulus cloud cover over the Atlantic during July 2006. I first use these data to study the spatial autocorrelation of aerosol optical depth and find that it is correlated over a lag of 0.1◦ (approximately 10 km at low latitudes), beyond which it rapidly decorrelates. I find a 15 % higher cloud fraction in regions with high dust loading (AOD > 0.5), compared with scenes with a lower dust loading (AOD < 0.5), which for high dust scenes increases with local static stability. I attribute this tentatively to aerosol solar shielding enhancing longwave cloud top radiative cooling which drives marine stratocumulus convection.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:563121
Date January 2010
CreatorsBulgin, Claire Elizabeth
ContributorsPalmer, Paul. : Merchant, Chris. : Siddans, Richard
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/4906

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