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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/11433
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Title: | Quantifying the respective roles of aerosols and clouds in the strong brightening since the early 2000s over the Iberian Peninsula |
Authors: | Mateos, David Sanchez-Lorenzo, Arturo Antón, Manuel Cachorro, Victoria Calbó, J. Costa, Maria João Torres, Bernardo Wild, Martin |
Keywords: | Brightening Aerosols and Clouds |
Issue Date: | Aug-2014 |
Publisher: | AGU |
Citation: | Mateos, D., A. Sanchez-Lorenzo, M. Antón,
V. E. Cachorro, J. Calbó, M. J. Costa, B. Torres,
and M. Wild (2014), Quantifying the
respective roles of aerosols and clouds in
the strong brightening since the early
2000s over the Iberian Peninsula,
J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 119, doi:10.1002/
2014JD022076. |
Abstract: | The contribution of clouds and aerosols to the decadal variations of downward surface shortwave
radiation (SSR) is a current controversial topic. This study proposes a method, which is based on surface-based
SSR measurements, aerosol observations, and radiative transfer simulations (in cloud-free and cloud- and
aerosol-free scenarios), to evaluate cloud-aerosol (CARE), cloud (CRE), and aerosol (ARE) radiative effects. This
method is applied to quantify the role played by, separately, clouds and aerosols on the intense brightening of
the SSR observed in the Iberian Peninsula. Clouds and Earth’s Radiation Energy Budget System (CERES) and
surface-based data exhibit an increase in SSR between 2003 and 2012, exceeding +10 Wm 2 over this period for
some areas of the peninsula. The calculations are performed for three surface-based sites: Barcelona and Valladolid
(Spain), and Évora (Portugal). Ranges in monthly values of CARE, CRE, and ARE are ( 80, 20), ( 60, 20), and
( 30, 0), respectively (in Wm 2). The average trends for the analyzed period of CARE, CRE, and ARE are +7, +5,
and +2 Wm 2 per decade, respectively. Overall, three fourths of the SSR trend is explained by clouds,
while the other one fourth is related to aerosol changes. The SSR trends explained by the clouds and
aerosol radiative effects are in line with the observed reductions in total cloud cover and aerosol
load (both at the surface and in the whole atmospheric column). Furthermore, the CRE values are
compared against CERES data showing good agreement between both data series, although some
discrepancies are observed in their trends. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/11433 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | FIS - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica CGE - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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