Aerosol properties and aerosol-radiation interactions in clear-sky conditions over Germany

被引:11
|
作者
Witthuhn, Jonas [1 ]
Hunerbein, Anja [1 ]
Filipitsch, Florian [2 ]
Wacker, Stefan [2 ]
Meilinger, Stefanie [3 ]
Deneke, Hartwig [1 ]
机构
[1] Leibniz Inst Tropospher Res TROPOS, Leipzig, Germany
[2] German Weather Serv DWD, Meteorol Observ Lindenberg, Tauche, Germany
[3] Bonn Rhein Sieg Univ Appl Sci, Int Ctr Sustainable Dev IZNE, St Augustin, Germany
关键词
ATMOSPHERIC WATER-VAPOR; SOLAR-RADIATION; LINKE TURBIDITY; TIME-SERIES; PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT; CLIMATE FEEDBACKS; CAMS REANALYSIS; OPTICAL DEPTH; IRRADIANCE; MODEL;
D O I
10.5194/acp-21-14591-2021
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
The clear-sky radiative effect of aerosol-radiation interactions is of relevance for our understanding of the climate system. The influence of aerosol on the surface energy budget is of high interest for the renewable energy sector. In this study, the radiative effect is investigated in particular with respect to seasonal and regional variations for the region of Germany and the year 2015 at the surface and top of atmosphere using two complementary approaches. First, an ensemble of clear-sky models which explicitly consider aerosols is utilized to retrieve the aerosol optical depth and the surface direct radiative effect of aerosols by means of a clear-sky fitting technique. For this, short-wave broadband irradiance measurements in the absence of clouds are used as a basis. A clear-sky detection algorithm is used to identify cloud-free observations. Considered are measurements of the short-wave broadband global and diffuse horizontal irradiance with shaded and unshaded pyranometers at 25 stations across Germany within the observational network of the German Weather Service (DWD). The clear-sky models used are the Modified MAC model (MMAC), the Meteorological Radiation Model (MRM) v6.1, the MeteorologicalStatistical solar radiation model (METSTAT), the European Solar Radiation Atlas (ESRA), Heliosat-1, the Center for Environment and Man solar radiation model (CEM), and the simplified Solis model. The definition of aerosol and atmospheric characteristics of the models are examined in detail for their suitability for this approach. Second, the radiative effect is estimated using explicit radiative transfer simulations with inputs on the meteorological state of the atmosphere, trace gases and aerosol from the Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS) reanalysis. The aerosol optical properties (aerosol optical depth, Angstrom exponent, single scattering albedo and asymmetry parameter) are first evaluated with AERONET direct sun and inversion products. The largest inconsistency is found for the aerosol absorption, which is overestimated by about 0.03 or about 30% by the CAMS reanalysis. Compared to the DWD observational network, the simulated global, direct and diffuse irradiances show reasonable agreement within the measurement uncertainty. The radiative kernel method is used to estimate the resulting uncertainty and bias of the simulated direct radiative effect. The uncertainty is estimated to 1:5 +/- 7.7 and 0.6 +/- 3.5Wm(-2) at the surface and top of atmosphere, respectively, while the annual-mean biases at the surface, top of atmosphere and total atmosphere are 10:6, 6.5 and 4.1Wm(-2) respectively. The retrieval of the aerosol radiative effect with the clearsky models shows a high level of agreement with the radiative transfer simulations, with an RMSE of 5.8 Wm(-2) and a correlation of 0.75. The annual mean of the REari at the surface for the 25 DWD stations shows a value of 12.8 +/- 5 Wm(-2) as the average over the clear-sky models, compared to 11Wm(-2) from the radiative transfer simulations. Since all models assume a fixed aerosol characterization, the annual cycle of the aerosol radiation effect cannot be reproduced. Out of this set of clear-sky models, the largest level of agreement is shown by the ESRA and MRM v6.1 models.
引用
收藏
页码:14591 / 14630
页数:40
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Subgrid-scale variability in clear-sky relative humidity and forcing by aerosol-radiation interactions in an atmosphere model
    Petersik, Paul
    Salzmann, Marc
    Kretzschmar, Jan
    Cherian, Ribu
    Mewes, Daniel
    Quaas, Johannes
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2018, 18 (12) : 8589 - 8599
  • [2] Clear-sky spectral radiance modeling under variable aerosol conditions
    Gueymard, Christian A.
    Kocifaj, Miroslav
    [J]. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 2022, 168
  • [3] Clear-sky spectral radiance modeling under variable aerosol conditions
    Gueymard, Christian A.
    Kocifaj, Miroslav
    [J]. RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS, 2022, 168
  • [4] Effect of aerosol on the clear-sky radiation regime as derived from Zvenigorod aerosol-cloud-radiation experiments
    Gorchakova, IA
    Mokhov, II
    Rublev, AN
    [J]. IZVESTIYA ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC PHYSICS, 2005, 41 (04) : 448 - 460
  • [5] THE EFFECT OF ANTHROPOGENIC SULFATE AND SOOT AEROSOL ON THE CLEAR-SKY PLANETARY RADIATION BUDGET
    HAYWOOD, JM
    SHINE, KP
    [J]. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 1995, 22 (05) : 603 - 606
  • [6] Tropospheric aerosol climate forcing in clear-sky satellite observations over the oceans
    Haywood, JM
    Ramaswamy, V
    Soden, BJ
    [J]. SCIENCE, 1999, 283 (5406) : 1299 - 1303
  • [7] Observations of the spectral clear-sky aerosol forcing over the tropical Indian Ocean
    Meywerk, J
    Ramanathan, V
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 1999, 104 (D20) : 24359 - 24370
  • [8] Contribution of sea salt aerosol to the planetary clear-sky albedo
    Winter, B
    Chylek, P
    [J]. TELLUS SERIES B-CHEMICAL AND PHYSICAL METEOROLOGY, 1997, 49 (01): : 72 - 79
  • [9] The role of aerosol absorption in driving clear-sky solar dimming over East Asia
    Persad, Geeta G.
    Ming, Yi
    Ramaswamy, V.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2014, 119 (17) : 10,410 - 10,424
  • [10] Precipitation response to aerosol-radiation and aerosol-cloud interactions in regional climate simulations over Europe
    Maria Lopez-Romero, Jose
    Pedro Montavez, Juan
    Jerez, Sonia
    Lorente-Plazas, Raquel
    Palacios-Pena, Laura
    Jimenez-Guerrero, Pedro
    [J]. ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2021, 21 (01) : 415 - 430