Abstract
Abstract. A state-of-the-art regional model, the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model (Skamarock et al., 2008) coupled with a chemistry component (Chem) (Grell et al., 2005), is coupled with the snow, ice, and aerosol radiative (SNICAR) model that includes the most sophisticated representation of snow metamorphism processes available for climate study. The coupled model is used to simulate black carbon (BC) and dust concentrations and their radiative forcing in seasonal snow over North China in January–February of 2010, with extensive field measurements used to evaluate the model performance. In general, the model simulated spatial variability of BC and dust mass concentrations in the top snow layer (hereafter BCS and DSTS, respectively) are consistent with observations. The model generally moderately underestimates BCS in the clean regions but significantly overestimates BCS in some polluted regions. Most model results fall within the uncertainty ranges of observations. The simulated BCS and DSTS are highest with > 5000 ng g−1 and up to 5 mg g−1, respectively, over the source regions and reduce to < 50 ng g−1 and < 1 μg g−1, respectively, in the remote regions. BCS and DSTS introduce a similar magnitude of radiative warming (~ 10 W m−2) in the snowpack, which is comparable to the magnitude of surface radiative cooling due to BC and dust in the atmosphere. This study represents an effort in using a regional modeling framework to simulate BC and dust and their direct radiative forcing in snowpack. Although a variety of observational data sets have been used to attribute model biases, some uncertainties in the results remain, which highlights the need for more observations, particularly concurrent measurements of atmospheric and snow aerosols and the deposition fluxes of aerosols, in future campaigns.
Highlights
Snow is an important component in the Earth’s climate system
For the quasi-global Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF)-Chem simulation that provides the chemical boundary for the regional simulation, anthropogenic emissions for the year 2000 are obtained from the Reanalysis of the TROpospheric (RETRO) chemical composition inventories except over East Asia and the United States, where anthropogenic emissions are from the Asian 2006 emission inventory (Zhang et al, 2009) and from the US National Emission Inventory (NEI) 2005 (WRF-Chem user guide from http://ruc.noaa.gov/wrf/ WG11/Users_guide.pdf), respectively
The WRF-Chem model is coupled with the SNICAR model to simulate the black carbon (BC) and dust concentrations and their radiative forcing in seasonal snow over North China in January–February of 2010, consistent with a field campaign region and period
Summary
Snow is an important component in the Earth’s climate system. Water from snowmelt generates runoff to fill rivers and reservoirs in many regions of the world. Qian et al (2009) used a regional modeling framework to investigate the impact of BC in snow over the western USA, they estimated the BC content in snow based on a single year simulation with a coupled chemistry component and applied the same BC deposition to simulations of multiple years to estimate BC-insnow effects This method limits the interactions between BC deposition and climate that could influence the BC-induced snow albedo perturbations. This study represents the first effort on evaluating WRF-Chem for simulating BC and dust in snowpack at a relatively high spatial resolution against the field campaign measurements of BC content in snow, and on estimating the radiative forcing of BC and dust in snow over North China.
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