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Volcanic forcing for climate modeling : a new microphysics-based data set covering years 1600-present. / Arfeuille, F.; Weisenstein, D.; Mack, H.; Rozanov, E.; Peter, T.; Broennimann, S.

в: Climate of the Past, Том 10, № 1, 2014, стр. 359-375.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

Harvard

Arfeuille, F, Weisenstein, D, Mack, H, Rozanov, E, Peter, T & Broennimann, S 2014, 'Volcanic forcing for climate modeling: a new microphysics-based data set covering years 1600-present', Climate of the Past, Том. 10, № 1, стр. 359-375. https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-10-359-2014

APA

Arfeuille, F., Weisenstein, D., Mack, H., Rozanov, E., Peter, T., & Broennimann, S. (2014). Volcanic forcing for climate modeling: a new microphysics-based data set covering years 1600-present. Climate of the Past, 10(1), 359-375. https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-10-359-2014

Vancouver

Arfeuille F, Weisenstein D, Mack H, Rozanov E, Peter T, Broennimann S. Volcanic forcing for climate modeling: a new microphysics-based data set covering years 1600-present. Climate of the Past. 2014;10(1):359-375. https://doi.org/10.5194/cp-10-359-2014

Author

Arfeuille, F. ; Weisenstein, D. ; Mack, H. ; Rozanov, E. ; Peter, T. ; Broennimann, S. / Volcanic forcing for climate modeling : a new microphysics-based data set covering years 1600-present. в: Climate of the Past. 2014 ; Том 10, № 1. стр. 359-375.

BibTeX

@article{b28da4d2b50241bfa7cf19285c28958d,
title = "Volcanic forcing for climate modeling: a new microphysics-based data set covering years 1600-present",
abstract = "As the understanding and representation of the impacts of volcanic eruptions on climate have improved in the last decades, uncertainties in the stratospheric aerosol forcing from large eruptions are now linked not only to visible optical depth estimates on a global scale but also to details on the size, latitude and altitude distributions of the stratospheric aerosols. Based on our understanding of these uncertainties, we propose a new model-based approach to generating a volcanic forcing for general circulation model (GCM) and chemistry-climate model (CCM) simulations. This new volcanic forcing, covering the 1600-present period, uses an aerosol microphysical model to provide a realistic, physically consistent treatment of the stratospheric sulfate aerosols. Twenty-six eruptions were modeled individually using the latest available ice cores aerosol mass estimates and historical data on the latitude and date of eruptions. The evolution of aerosol spatial and size distribution after the sulfur dioxide discharge are hence characterized for each volcanic eruption. Large variations are seen in hemispheric partitioning and size distributions in relation to location/date of eruptions and injected SO2 masses. Results for recent eruptions show reasonable agreement with observations. By providing these new estimates of spatial distributions of shortwave and long-wave radiative perturbations, this volcanic forcing may help to better constrain the climate model responses to volcanic eruptions in the 1600-present period. The final data set consists of 3-D values (with constant longitude) of spectrally resolved extinction coefficients, single scattering albedos and asymmetry factors calculated for different wavelength bands upon request. Surface area densities for heterogeneous chemistry are also provided.",
keywords = "OPTICAL DEPTH PERTURBATIONS, 1783-1784 LAKI ERUPTION, STRATOSPHERIC AEROSOL, LAST MILLENNIUM, 2-DIMENSIONAL MODEL, HISTORICAL TIMES, GLOBAL CLIMATE, IMPACT, TAMBORA, SULFUR",
author = "F. Arfeuille and D. Weisenstein and H. Mack and E. Rozanov and T. Peter and S. Broennimann",
year = "2014",
doi = "10.5194/cp-10-359-2014",
language = "Английский",
volume = "10",
pages = "359--375",
journal = "Climate of the Past",
issn = "1814-9324",
publisher = "European Geosciences Union",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Volcanic forcing for climate modeling

T2 - a new microphysics-based data set covering years 1600-present

AU - Arfeuille, F.

AU - Weisenstein, D.

AU - Mack, H.

AU - Rozanov, E.

AU - Peter, T.

AU - Broennimann, S.

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - As the understanding and representation of the impacts of volcanic eruptions on climate have improved in the last decades, uncertainties in the stratospheric aerosol forcing from large eruptions are now linked not only to visible optical depth estimates on a global scale but also to details on the size, latitude and altitude distributions of the stratospheric aerosols. Based on our understanding of these uncertainties, we propose a new model-based approach to generating a volcanic forcing for general circulation model (GCM) and chemistry-climate model (CCM) simulations. This new volcanic forcing, covering the 1600-present period, uses an aerosol microphysical model to provide a realistic, physically consistent treatment of the stratospheric sulfate aerosols. Twenty-six eruptions were modeled individually using the latest available ice cores aerosol mass estimates and historical data on the latitude and date of eruptions. The evolution of aerosol spatial and size distribution after the sulfur dioxide discharge are hence characterized for each volcanic eruption. Large variations are seen in hemispheric partitioning and size distributions in relation to location/date of eruptions and injected SO2 masses. Results for recent eruptions show reasonable agreement with observations. By providing these new estimates of spatial distributions of shortwave and long-wave radiative perturbations, this volcanic forcing may help to better constrain the climate model responses to volcanic eruptions in the 1600-present period. The final data set consists of 3-D values (with constant longitude) of spectrally resolved extinction coefficients, single scattering albedos and asymmetry factors calculated for different wavelength bands upon request. Surface area densities for heterogeneous chemistry are also provided.

AB - As the understanding and representation of the impacts of volcanic eruptions on climate have improved in the last decades, uncertainties in the stratospheric aerosol forcing from large eruptions are now linked not only to visible optical depth estimates on a global scale but also to details on the size, latitude and altitude distributions of the stratospheric aerosols. Based on our understanding of these uncertainties, we propose a new model-based approach to generating a volcanic forcing for general circulation model (GCM) and chemistry-climate model (CCM) simulations. This new volcanic forcing, covering the 1600-present period, uses an aerosol microphysical model to provide a realistic, physically consistent treatment of the stratospheric sulfate aerosols. Twenty-six eruptions were modeled individually using the latest available ice cores aerosol mass estimates and historical data on the latitude and date of eruptions. The evolution of aerosol spatial and size distribution after the sulfur dioxide discharge are hence characterized for each volcanic eruption. Large variations are seen in hemispheric partitioning and size distributions in relation to location/date of eruptions and injected SO2 masses. Results for recent eruptions show reasonable agreement with observations. By providing these new estimates of spatial distributions of shortwave and long-wave radiative perturbations, this volcanic forcing may help to better constrain the climate model responses to volcanic eruptions in the 1600-present period. The final data set consists of 3-D values (with constant longitude) of spectrally resolved extinction coefficients, single scattering albedos and asymmetry factors calculated for different wavelength bands upon request. Surface area densities for heterogeneous chemistry are also provided.

KW - OPTICAL DEPTH PERTURBATIONS

KW - 1783-1784 LAKI ERUPTION

KW - STRATOSPHERIC AEROSOL

KW - LAST MILLENNIUM

KW - 2-DIMENSIONAL MODEL

KW - HISTORICAL TIMES

KW - GLOBAL CLIMATE

KW - IMPACT

KW - TAMBORA

KW - SULFUR

U2 - 10.5194/cp-10-359-2014

DO - 10.5194/cp-10-359-2014

M3 - статья

VL - 10

SP - 359

EP - 375

JO - Climate of the Past

JF - Climate of the Past

SN - 1814-9324

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 105537388