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Can Aerosol Direct Radiative Effects Account for Analysis Increments of Temperature in the Tropical Atlantic?In the late 1990's, prior to the launch of the Terra satellite, atmospheric general circulation models (GCMs) did not include aerosol processes because aerosols were not properly monitored on a global scale and their spatial distributions were not known well enough for their incorporation in operational GCMs. At the time of the first GEOS Reanalysis (Schubert et al. 1993), long time series of analysis increments (the corrections to the atmospheric state by all available meteorological observations) became readily available, enabling detailed analysis of the GEOS-1 errors on a global scale. Such analysis revealed that temperature biases were particularly pronounced in the Tropical Atlantic region, with patterns depicting a remarkable similarity to dust plumes emanating from the African continent as evidenced by TOMS aerosol index maps. Yoram Kaufman was instrumental encouraging us to pursue this issue further, resulting in the study reported in Alpert et al. (1998) where we attempted to assess aerosol forcing by studying the errors of a the GEOS-1 GCM without aerosol physics within a data assimilation system. Based on this analysis, Alpert et al. (1998) put forward that dust aerosols are an important source of inaccuracies in numerical weather-prediction models in the Tropical Atlantic region, although a direct verification of this hypothesis was not possible back then. Nearly 20 years later, numerical prediction models have increased in resolution and complexity of physical parameterizations, including the representation of aerosols and their interactions with the circulation. Moreover, with the advent of NASA's EOS program and subsequent satellites, atmospheric aerosols are now monitored globally on a routine basis, and their assimilation in global models are becoming well established. In this talk we will reexamine the Alpert et al. (1998) hypothesis using the most recent version of the GEOS-5 Data Assimilation System with assimilation of aerosols. We will explicitly calculate the impact of aerosols on the temperature analysis increments in the tropical Atlantic and assess the extent to which inclusion of atmospheric aerosols have reduced these increments.
Document ID
20160009143
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Presentation
Authors
da Silva, Arlindo M.
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Alpert, Pinhas
(Tel-Aviv Univ. Israel)
Date Acquired
July 19, 2016
Publication Date
June 21, 2016
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Report/Patent Number
GSFC-E-DAA-TN33544
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2016 ORACLES Science Team Meeting
Location: Mountain View, CA
Country: United States
Start Date: June 23, 2016
End Date: June 25, 2016
Sponsors: NASA Ames Research Center
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
General Circulation Models
GCM
GEOS-5
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