TY - JOUR
T1 - What controls the vertical distribution of aerosol? Relationships between process sensitivity in HadGEM3-UKCA and inter-model variation from AeroCom Phase II
AU - Kipling, Zak
AU - Stier, Philip
AU - Johnson, Colin E.
AU - Mann, Graham W.
AU - Bellouin, Nicolas
AU - Bauer, Susanne E.
AU - Bergman, Tommi
AU - Chin, Mian
AU - Diehl, Thomas
AU - Ghan, Steven J.
AU - Iversen, Trond
AU - Kirkevåg, Alf
AU - Kokkola, Harri
AU - Liu, Xiaohong
AU - Luo, Gan
AU - Van Noije, Twan
AU - Pringle, Kirsty J.
AU - Von Salzen, Knut
AU - Schulz, Michael
AU - Seland, Øyvind
AU - Skeie, Ragnhild B.
AU - Takemura, Toshihiko
AU - Tsigaridis, Kostas
AU - Zhang, Kai
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Natural Environment Research Council project GASSP (grant number NE/J022624/1) and the Met Office. P. Stier would like to acknowledge funding from the European Research Council under the European Union''s Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007- 2013)/ERC grant agreement no. FP7-280025. G. W. Mann was supported by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) through the National Centre for Atmospheric Science (NCAS). T. Bergman and H. Kokkola were supported by the Academy of Finland Centre of Excellence (project no. 272041). S. Ghan and X. Liu were supported by the US Department of Energy Office of Science Decadal and Regional Climate Prediction using Earth System Models (EaSM) programme. The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) is operated for the DOE by Battelle Memorial Institute under contract DE-AC06-76RLO 1830. A. Kirkevåg, T. Iversen and Ø. Seland (CAM4-Oslo) were supported by the Research Council of Norway through the EarthClim (207711/E10), EVA (229771) and NOTUR/NorStore projects, by the Norwegian Space Centre through PM-VRAE, and through the EU projects PEGASOS and ACCESS. K. von Salzen was supported by the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences (CFCAS) and Environment Canada. R. B. Skeie (OsloCTM2) was supported by the Research Council of Norway, through the grants SLAC, AEROCOM-P3 and ClimSense. T. Takemura was supported by the supercomputer system of the National Institute for Environmental Studies, Japan, the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (S-12-3) of the Ministry of the Environment, Japan, and JSPS KAKENHI (grant numbers 15H01728 and 15K12190). K. Tsigaridis and S. E. Bauer were supported by NASA-MAP (NASA award number: NNX09AK32G). Resources supporting this work were provided by the NASA High-End Computing (HEC) Program through the NASA Center for Climate Simulation (NCCS) at Goddard Space Flight Center. K. Zhang was supported by funding from the Max Planck Society. Simulations with ECHAM5- HAM2 were performed at the German Climate Computing Center (Deutsches Klimarechenzentrum GmbH, DKRZ). ERA-Interim data provided by Paul Berrisford and the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF). The development of GLOMAP-mode within HadGEM is part of the UKCA project, which is supported by both NERC and the Joint DECC/DEFRA Met Office Hadley Centre Climate Programme. We acknowledge use of the MONSooN system, a collaborative facility supplied under the Joint Weather and Climate Research Programme, a strategic partnership between the Met Office and the Natural Environment Research Council.
Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) 2016.
PY - 2016/2/26
Y1 - 2016/2/26
N2 - The vertical profile of aerosol is important for its radiative effects, but weakly constrained by observations on the global scale, and highly variable among different models. To investigate the controlling factors in one particular model, we investigate the effects of individual processes in HadGEM3-UKCA and compare the resulting diversity of aerosol vertical profiles with the inter-model diversity from the AeroCom Phase II control experiment. In this way we show that (in this model at least) the vertical profile is controlled by a relatively small number of processes, although these vary among aerosol components and particle sizes. We also show that sufficiently coarse variations in these processes can produce a similar diversity to that among different models in terms of the global-mean profile and, to a lesser extent, the zonal-mean vertical position. However, there are features of certain models' profiles that cannot be reproduced, suggesting the influence of further structural differences between models. In HadGEM3-UKCA, convective transport is found to be very important in controlling the vertical profile of all aerosol components by mass. In-cloud scavenging is very important for all except mineral dust. Growth by condensation is important for sulfate and carbonaceous aerosol (along with aqueous oxidation for the former and ageing by soluble material for the latter). The vertical extent of biomass-burning emissions into the free troposphere is also important for the profile of carbonaceous aerosol. Boundary-layer mixing plays a dominant role for sea salt and mineral dust, which are emitted only from the surface. Dry deposition and below-cloud scavenging are important for the profile of mineral dust only. In this model, the microphysical processes of nucleation, condensation and coagulation dominate the vertical profile of the smallest particles by number (e.g. total CN > 3 nm), while the profiles of larger particles (e.g. CN > 100 nm) are controlled by the same processes as the component mass profiles, plus the size distribution of primary emissions. We also show that the processes that affect the AOD-normalised radiative forcing in the model are predominantly those that affect the vertical mass distribution, in particular convective transport, in-cloud scavenging, aqueous oxidation, ageing and the vertical extent of biomass-burning emissions.
AB - The vertical profile of aerosol is important for its radiative effects, but weakly constrained by observations on the global scale, and highly variable among different models. To investigate the controlling factors in one particular model, we investigate the effects of individual processes in HadGEM3-UKCA and compare the resulting diversity of aerosol vertical profiles with the inter-model diversity from the AeroCom Phase II control experiment. In this way we show that (in this model at least) the vertical profile is controlled by a relatively small number of processes, although these vary among aerosol components and particle sizes. We also show that sufficiently coarse variations in these processes can produce a similar diversity to that among different models in terms of the global-mean profile and, to a lesser extent, the zonal-mean vertical position. However, there are features of certain models' profiles that cannot be reproduced, suggesting the influence of further structural differences between models. In HadGEM3-UKCA, convective transport is found to be very important in controlling the vertical profile of all aerosol components by mass. In-cloud scavenging is very important for all except mineral dust. Growth by condensation is important for sulfate and carbonaceous aerosol (along with aqueous oxidation for the former and ageing by soluble material for the latter). The vertical extent of biomass-burning emissions into the free troposphere is also important for the profile of carbonaceous aerosol. Boundary-layer mixing plays a dominant role for sea salt and mineral dust, which are emitted only from the surface. Dry deposition and below-cloud scavenging are important for the profile of mineral dust only. In this model, the microphysical processes of nucleation, condensation and coagulation dominate the vertical profile of the smallest particles by number (e.g. total CN > 3 nm), while the profiles of larger particles (e.g. CN > 100 nm) are controlled by the same processes as the component mass profiles, plus the size distribution of primary emissions. We also show that the processes that affect the AOD-normalised radiative forcing in the model are predominantly those that affect the vertical mass distribution, in particular convective transport, in-cloud scavenging, aqueous oxidation, ageing and the vertical extent of biomass-burning emissions.
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U2 - 10.5194/acp-16-2221-2016
DO - 10.5194/acp-16-2221-2016
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84959421220
SN - 1680-7316
VL - 16
SP - 2221
EP - 2241
JO - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
JF - Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
IS - 4
ER -