Abstract

Abstract. Anthropogenic aerosol effects on climate produce one of the largest uncertainties in estimates of radiative forcing of past and future climate change. Much of this uncertainty arises from the multi-scale nature of the interactions between aerosols, clouds and large-scale dynamics, which are difficult to represent in conventional general circulation models (GCMs). In this study, we develop a multi-scale aerosol-climate model that treats aerosols and clouds across different scales, and evaluate the model performance, with a focus on aerosol treatment. This new model is an extension of a multi-scale modeling framework (MMF) model that embeds a cloud-resolving model (CRM) within each grid column of a GCM. In this extension, the effects of clouds on aerosols are treated by using an explicit-cloud parameterized-pollutant (ECPP) approach that links aerosol and chemical processes on the large-scale grid with statistics of cloud properties and processes resolved by the CRM. A two-moment cloud microphysics scheme replaces the simple bulk microphysics scheme in the CRM, and a modal aerosol treatment is included in the GCM. With these extensions, this multi-scale aerosol-climate model allows the explicit simulation of aerosol and chemical processes in both stratiform and convective clouds on a global scale. Simulated aerosol budgets in this new model are in the ranges of other model studies. Simulated gas and aerosol concentrations are in reasonable agreement with observations (within a factor of 2 in most cases), although the model underestimates black carbon concentrations at the surface by a factor of 2–4. Simulated aerosol size distributions are in reasonable agreement with observations in the marine boundary layer and in the free troposphere, while the model underestimates the accumulation mode number concentrations near the surface, and overestimates the accumulation mode number concentrations in the middle and upper free troposphere by a factor of about 2. The overestimation of accumulation model number concentrations in the middle and upper free troposphere is consistent with large aerosol mass fraction above 5 km in the MMF model compared with other models. Simulated cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentrations are within the observational variations. Simulated aerosol optical depths (AOD) are in reasonable agreement with observations (within a factor of 2), and the spatial distribution of AOD is consistent with observations, while the model underestimates AOD over regions with strong fossil fuel and biomass burning emissions. Overall, this multi-scale aerosol-climate model simulates aerosol fields as well as conventional aerosol models.

Highlights

  • Atmospheric aerosols are an important component of the global climate system

  • In the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL)-multi-scale modeling framework (MMF), the treatment of cloud-related aerosol and gas processes in the standard CAM5 is replaced by the explicit-cloud parameterized-pollutant (ECPP) approach (Sect. 2.3), which uses cloud statistics simulated by the cloud resolving model (CRM) to drive the aerosol processing by clouds

  • The third component of this multi-scale aerosolclimate model is the Explicit-Cloud-Parameterized-Pollutant (ECPP) approach, which uses cloud statistics diagnosed from the CRM component of the MMF model to drive the aerosol and gas processing by clouds

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Summary

Introduction

Atmospheric aerosols are an important component of the global climate system. They can affect the climate system directly by scattering or absorbing solar radiation, and indirectly through their effects on clouds by acting as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) or ice nuclei (IN). The host GCM model is updated to use a modal aerosol approach to treat aerosol processes and represent aerosol size distributions; second, an explicit-cloud parameterized-pollutant (ECPP) approach (Gustafson et al, 2008) is added to link aerosol and chemical processes on the GCM grid with statistics of cloud properties resolved by the CRM, and third, a two-moment cloud microphysics scheme replaces the simple one moment scheme in the CRM With these changes, the new MMF model (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory MMF, or PNNL-MMF) has the capability to study aerosolcloud interactions from cumulus to global scales.

The NCAR CAM5 atmospheric GCM
The SAM CRM
Classifications of CRM cells in each GCM grid
Calculation of entrainment and detrainment rate
Solving the continuity equation
Emissions and set-up of simulations
Annual global budgets of aerosols and gas species
Simulated global and vertical distributions of aerosols and gas species
Aerosol number and Size distributions
Aerosol optical properties
Findings
Summary and discussion
Full Text
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