GAW Aerosols Research |
GAW Aerosol Programme
The Global Atmosphere
Watch (GAW) aerosol programme strives "to determine the spatio-temporal
distribution of aerosol properties related to climate forcing and air
quality up to multidecadal time scales". Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) is
one of the parameters measured in GAW. More specific information is
obtained by the GAW Atmospheric Lidar Observation Network (GALION) that
provides the vertical aerosol distribution through advanced laser remote
sensing in a network of ground-based stations.
Goals
The main goal of the GAW Aerosol Programme
is to enhance the coverage, effectiveness, and application of long-term
aerosol measurements within GAW and with cooperating networks
worldwide, by
- Further harmonizing aerosol measurements.
- Promoting coordination of networks for in situ observations.
- Establishing a GAW aerosol lidar network in cooperation with existing networks.
- Contributing to the integration of satellite, aircraft, and surface-based aerosol observations with aerosol modelling.
- Encouraging greater data submission and utilisation of GAW aerosol data.
- Supporting near-real-time exchange of aerosol data.
Effects of aerosols
Airborne aerosols affect
many aspects of human health and the environment. Aerosol mass and its
toxicity are known to have links to chronic respiratory and acute
cardio-vascular problems. Aerosols are also tightly linked to problems
of visibility reduction, acid rain, and urban smog in many locations of
the world.
Furthermore, aerosols influence the atmospheric energy budget through direct and indirect effects.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) discusses these direct and indirect effects of aerosols (Figure 1).
- The direct effect is the mechanism by which aerosols scatter and absorb shortwave and longwave radiation, thereby altering the radiative balance of the Earth-atmosphere system. Sulphate, fossil fuel organic carbon, fossil fuel black carbon, biomass burning and mineral dust aerosols were all identified as having a significant anthropogenic component and exerting a significant direct radiative forcing.
- The indirect effect is the mechanism by which aerosols modify the microphysical and hence the radiative properties, amount and lifetime of clouds.
- The ‘first indirect effect’, the ‘cloud albedo effect’, or the ‘Twomey effect' is the microphysically induced effect on the cloud droplet number concentration and hence the cloud droplet size, with the liquid water content held fixed.
- The ‘second indirect effect’, the ‘cloud lifetime effect’ or the ‘Albrecht effect’ is the microphysically induced effect on the liquid water content, cloud height, and lifetime of clouds.
- The semi-direct effect is the mechanism by which
absorption of shortwave radiation by tropospheric aerosols leads to
heating of the troposphere that in turn changes the
relative humidity and the stability of the troposphere and thereby influences cloud formation and lifetime.
Figure 1 (click image to enlarge):
Schematic diagram showing the various radiative mechanisms associated
with cloud effects that have been identified as significant in relation
to aerosols. The small black dots represent aerosol particles; the
larger open circles cloud droplets. Straight lines represent the
incident and reflected solar radiation, and wavy lines represent
terrestrial radiation. The filled white circles indicate cloud droplet
number concentration (CDNC). The unperturbed cloud contains larger cloud
drops as only natural aerosols are available as cloud condensation
nuclei, while the perturbed cloud contains a greater number of smaller
cloud drops as both natural and anthropogenic aerosols are available as
cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). The vertical grey dashes represent
rainfall, and LWC refers to the liquid water content (Physical Science Basis, AR4 Report, IPCC, 2007).
Observations
• Physical Properties:
• particle number concentration (size integrated)
• particle number size distribution
• particle mass concentration (two size fractions)
• cloud condensation nuclei number concentration (at various super-saturations)
• Optical Properties:
• light scattering coefficient (various wavelengths)
• light hemispheric backscattering coefficient (various wavelengths)
• light absorption coefficient (various wavelengths)
• light scattering coefficient (various wavelengths)
• light hemispheric backscattering coefficient (various wavelengths)
• light absorption coefficient (various wavelengths)
• Chemical Properties:
• mass concentration of major chemical components (two size fractions)
• mass concentration of major chemical components (two size fractions)
• Column and Profile:
• aerosol optical depth (various wavelengths)
• vertical profile of aerosol backscattering coefficient
• vertical profile of aerosol extinction coefficient
Additional parameters recommended for long-term or intermittent observation:
• dependence of aerosol properties on relative humidity
• detailed, size segregated chemical composition.
• aerosol optical depth (various wavelengths)
• vertical profile of aerosol backscattering coefficient
• vertical profile of aerosol extinction coefficient
Additional parameters recommended for long-term or intermittent observation:
• dependence of aerosol properties on relative humidity
• detailed, size segregated chemical composition.
Ground-based Global Aerosol Optical Depth (AOD) Network
Aerosol optical depth (AOD) is a measure
of the amount of light that aerosols scatter and absorb in the
atmosphere (and generally prevent from reaching the surface).
Radiometers — instruments that quantify the amount of electromagnetic
radiation (light) — are among the most important tools available to
measure AOD. These radiometer instruments measure AOD in an integrated
way over the vertical or atmospheric column, hence providing horizontal
distributions of AOD (NASA).
The objective of a global aerosol optical depth network is:
"to provide, on a multidecadal time
scale, the spatio-temporal distribution of one of the five “core”
aerosol properties recommended by the GAW Scientific Advisory Group for
aerosols required for understanding climate forcing, air quality and
hemispheric air pollution, transport and deposition (GAW Report No. 162)".
The global long-term groundbased AOD
activities are illustrated in Figure 2 by a Global map of long-term AOD
network sites as of March 2004. The Global ground-based AOD network
has the following characteristics:
- Ten independent networks;
- 90 stations with a continuous record for the past 4 years and temporal data coverage of
50% were identified and documented;
- Half of the stations fall within the AERONET project, the other half is maintained mainly by WMO Members and Asian SKYNET;
- Hemispheric coverage corresponds roughly to the landmass distribution, (⅓SH, ⅔NH),
with Australia, Europe and North America accounting for more than 50% of stations;
- Major gaps exist in Africa, India, Latin America and the polar regions (GAW Report No. 162).
- Ten independent networks;
- 90 stations with a continuous record for the past 4 years and temporal data coverage of
50% were identified and documented;
- Half of the stations fall within the AERONET project, the other half is maintained mainly by WMO Members and Asian SKYNET;
- Hemispheric coverage corresponds roughly to the landmass distribution, (⅓SH, ⅔NH),
with Australia, Europe and North America accounting for more than 50% of stations;
- Major gaps exist in Africa, India, Latin America and the polar regions (GAW Report No. 162).
Figure 2 (click image to enlarge): Global map of long-term AOD network sites (GAW Report No. 162).
LIDAR Networks
LIDAR (Light Detection And
Ranging) is the visible light analog of radar. Very short laser pulses
of light are sent into the atmosphere, are scattered back to the lidar
by gases and aerosols in the air, and from the time out to these
scatterers and the time to return back to the lidar, the position,
concentration and some information on the properties of the scatters are
determined. In contrast to radiometers, LIDARs can measure the vertical
distribution of aerosols (e.g. Figure 4 below). In the most common
configuration of lidars in Europe in the EARLINET component of GALION
(GAW Aerosol Lidar Observation Network), light at 355, 532 and 1064 nm
(ultraviolet, green and infrared) wavelengths is emitted vertically.
LIDARs can also be carried by satellites.
Figure 3 (click image to enlarge):
Distribution of stations as available through the cooperation between
existing LIDAR networks. The different networks are indicated by the dot
colour: Asian Dust Network (AD-Net) violet, American LIdar Network
(ALINE) yellow, CISLiNet green, European Aerosol Research Lidar Network
(EARLINET) red, Micro-Pulse Lidar Network (MPLNET) brown, Network for
the Detection of Atmospheric Composition Change (NDACC) white, Regional
East Aerosol Lidar Mesonet (REALM) blue (GAW Report No. 178).
The aerosol properties
observed include the identification of aerosol layers, profiles of
optical properties with known and specified precision (backscatter and
extinction coefficients at selected wavelengths, lidar ratio, Ångström
coefficients), aerosol type (e.g. dust, maritime, fire smoke, urban
haze), and microphysical properties (e.g., volume and surface
concentrations, size distribution parameters, refractive index).
Observations are planned to be made with sufficient coverage,
resolution, and accuracy to establish comprehensive aerosol climatology,
to evaluate model performance, to assist and complement space-borne
observations, and to provide input to forecast models of "chemical
weather".
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