共检索到 3

Emissions from road traffic are one of the most important sources of soot aerosols and they can affect the surfaces in the area. In the case of snow surfaces, this effect may lead to changes in the radiative forcing and snow melt, also influenced by particle transport such as particle diffusion and advection. An experimental campaign in The Andes, Chile, was carried out measuring the radiance and irradiance of the snow perpendicularly to a road with high traffic load, together with the meteorological conditions (to identify the diffusion and advection phenomena), the aerosol size distribution, the concentration of particles (PM1, PM2.5 and PM10), and the concentration of black carbon (BC) in both, the atmosphere and the snowpack. The aim of the study was to quantify the contribution of four factors affecting the albedo (black carbon -BC- concentration in snow, grain size, cloudiness, and roughness) by comparing the measured albedo of the contaminated snow surface with that of the same surface prior to contamination, considered as a reference. Results showed a trade-off between diffusion and advection. Close to the road, diffusion was predominant, leading to an increase in BC concentration and a reduction in snow albedo. On the contrary, far from the road, where winds are channeled along the centre of the valley, advection of particles became dominant, leading to another increase in particle concentration and another reduction in snow albedo. Among the factors contributing to reduce the snow albedo, BC concentration dominates at all distances from the road, although the effect of the grain size becomes as significant as that of BC in the centre of the valley, with the effects of surface roughness and cloudiness remaining minor. This information can be used in snow models to get a better knowledge of the effect of particle deposition on albedo reductions.

期刊论文 2023-12-15 DOI: 10.1016/j.atmosenv.2023.120136 ISSN: 1352-2310

Recent climate change has reduced the spatial extent and thickness of permafrost in many discontinuous permafrost regions. Rapid permafrost thaw is producing distinct landscape changes in the Taiga Plains of the Northwest Territories, Canada. As permafrost bodies underlying forested peat plateaus shrink, the landscape slowly transitions into unforested wetlands. The expansion of wetlands has enhanced the hydrologic connectivity of many watersheds via new surface and near-surface flow paths, and increased streamflow has been observed. Furthermore, the decrease in forested peat plateaus results in a net loss of boreal forest and associated ecosystems. This study investigates fundamental processes that contribute to permafrost thaw by comparing observed and simulated thaw development and landscape transition of a peat plateau-wetland complex in the Northwest Territories, Canada from 1970 to 2012. Measured climate data are first used to drive surface energy balance simulations for the wetland and peat plateau. Near-surface soil temperatures simulated in the surface energy balance model are then applied as the upper boundary condition to a three-dimensional model of subsurface water flow and coupled energy transport with freeze-thaw. Simulation results demonstrate that lateral heat transfer, which is not considered in many permafrost models, can influence permafrost thaw rates. Furthermore, the simulations indicate that landscape evolution arising from permafrost thaw acts as a positive feedback mechanism that increases the energy absorbed at the land surface and produces additional permafrost thaw. The modeling results also demonstrate that flow rates in local groundwater flow systems may be enhanced by the degradation of isolated permafrost bodies.

期刊论文 2016-02-01 DOI: 10.1002/2015WR018057 ISSN: 0043-1397

Aerosol forcing remains a dominant uncertainty in climate studies. The impact of aerosol direct radiative forcing on Indian monsoon is extremely complex and is strongly dependent on the model, aerosol distribution and characteristics specified in the model, modelling strategy employed as well as on spatial and temporal scales. The present study investigates (i) the aerosol direct radiative forcing impact on mean Indian summer monsoon when a combination of quasi-realistic mean annual cycles of scattering and absorbing aerosols derived from an aerosol transport model constrained with satellite observed Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) is prescribed, (ii) the dominant feedback mechanism behind the simulated impact of all-aerosol direct radiative forcing on monsoon and (iii) the relative impacts of absorbing and scattering aerosols on mean Indian summer monsoon. We have used CAM3, an atmospheric GCM (AGCM) that has a comprehensive treatment of the aerosol-radiation interaction. This AGCM has been used to perform climate simulations with three different representations of aerosol direct radiative forcing due to the total, scattering aerosols and black carbon aerosols. We have also conducted experiments without any aerosol forcing. Aerosol direct impact due to scattering aerosols causes significant reduction in summer monsoon precipitation over India with a tendency for southward shift of Tropical Convergence Zones (TCZs) over the Indian region. Aerosol forcing reduces surface solar absorption over the primary rainbelt region of India and reduces the surface and lower tropospheric temperatures. Concurrent warming of the lower atmosphere over the warm oceanic region in the south reduces the land-ocean temperature contrast and weakens the monsoon overturning circulation and the advection of moisture into the landmass. This increases atmospheric convective stability, and decreases convection, clouds, precipitation and associated latent heat release. Our analysis reveals a defining negative moisture-advection feedback that acts as an internal damping mechanism spinning down the regional hydrological cycle and leading to significant circulation changes in response to external radiative forcing perturbations. When total aerosol loading (both absorbing and scattering aerosols) is prescribed, dust and black carbon aerosols are found to cause significant atmospheric heating over the monsoon region but the aerosol-induced weakening of meridional lower tropospheric temperature gradient (leading to weaker summer monsoon rainfall) more than offsets the increase in summer-time rainfall resulting from the atmospheric heating effect of absorbing aerosols, leading to a net decrease of summer monsoon rainfall. Further, we have carried out climate simulations with globally constant AODs and also with the constant AODs over the extended Indian region replaced by realistic AODs. Regional aerosol radiative forcing perturbations over the Indian region is found to have impact not only over the region of loading but over remote tropical regions as well. This warrants the need to prescribe realistic aerosol properties in strategic regions such as India in order to accurately assess the aerosol impact.

期刊论文 2012-08-01 DOI: 10.1007/s12040-012-0198-2 ISSN: 2347-4327
  • 首页
  • 1
  • 末页
  • 跳转
当前展示1-3条  共3条,1页