Dear Martin,

Thank you for making these proposals for VolMIP names and for providing a 
definition to explain the difference between volcanic ash and volcanic aerosol. 
As you point out in the proposals, these names are analogous to existing ones 
and to some that have been proposed for PMIP - they seem to be quite straight 
forward quantities. In some places longwave and shortwave appear to have been 
accidentally transposed, and there are a few mistakes in the units (probably 
just typos rather than mistakes in the CMIP6 data request). I have taken the 
liberty of correcting these as I think it's very clear in all cases what was 
actually intended. The definitions are all based on existing text. I don't 
think there are any other outstanding issues with these names, so they are 
accepted for inclusion in the standard name table. Please see below for the 
details of the individual names.

> The new names are all associated with volcanic aerosols in the atmosphere ... 
> following existing patterns of usage we refer to them as
> "volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles" (cf. "dust_ambient_aerosol_particles").

This seems like a sensible syntax to adopt for these names.

> There are 3 names referring to volcanic ash in air: in order to make the 
> distinction clear we need a short piece of help text: "Volcanic aerosols
> include both volcanic ash and secondary products such as sulphate aerosols 
> formed from gaseous emissions of volcanic eruptions."
>
> 1. CMIP6 short name od550volso4: Aerosol optical depth at 550 nm due to 
> stratospheric volcanic aerosols
>
> Proposed name:
> stratosphere_optical_thickness_due_to_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles (W 
> m-2)
>
> This name is analogous to the existing standard name 
> atmosphere_optical_thickness_due_to_ambient_aerosol_particles.

The name looks fine. The units for an optical thickness should be '1', i.e. 
dimensionless - I assume this was just an oversight. I have constructed a 
definition from existing text:
'The optical thickness is the integral along the path of radiation of a volume 
scattering/absorption/attenuation coefficient. The radiative flux is reduced by 
a factor exp(-"optical_thickness") on traversing the path. A coordinate 
variable of radiation_wavelength or radiation_frequency can be specified to 
indicate that the optical thickness applies at specific wavelengths or 
frequencies. The stratosphere optical thickness applies to radiation passing 
through the atmosphere layer between the tropopause and stratopause. The 
specification of a physical process by the phrase "due_to_" process means that 
the quantity named is a single term in a sum of terms which together compose 
the general quantity named by omitting the phrase. "Aerosol" means the system 
of suspended liquid or solid particles in air (except cloud droplets) and their 
carrier gas, the air itself. "Ambient_aerosol" means that the aerosol is 
measured or modelled at the ambient state of pressure, temperature and relative 
hum
 idity that exists in its immediate environment. "Ambient aerosol particles" 
are aerosol particles that have taken up ambient water through hygroscopic 
growth. The extent of hygroscopic growth depends on the relative humidity and 
the composition of the particles. To specify the relative humidity and 
temperature at which the quantity described by the standard name applies, 
provide scalar coordinate variables with standard names of "relative_humidity" 
and "air_temperature". Volcanic aerosols include both volcanic ash and 
secondary products such as sulphate aerosols formed from gaseous emissions of 
volcanic eruptions.'

This name is accepted for publication in the standard name table and will be 
added in the May update.

> 2. CMIP6 short name lwsffluxaero: Longwave flux due to volcanic aerosols at 
> the surface
>
> Proposed name:
> surface_downwelling_longwave_flux_in_air_due_to_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles
>  (W m-2)
>
> As surface_downwelling_longwave_flux_in_air, but only component attributed to 
> volcanic aerosols. (cf. existing CMIP variable rlds).

The name and units look fine. I have constructed a definition from existing 
text:
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. 
Downwelling radiation is radiation from above. It does not mean "net downward". 
The term "longwave" means longwave radiation. When thought of as being incident 
on a surface, a radiative flux is sometimes called "irradiance". In addition, 
it is identical with the quantity measured by a cosine-collector light-meter 
and sometimes called "vector irradiance". In accordance with common usage in 
geophysical disciplines, "flux" implies per unit area, called "flux density" in 
physics. The specification of a physical process by the phrase "due_to_" 
process means that the quantity named is a single term in a sum of terms which 
together compose the general quantity named by omitting the phrase. Aerosol" 
means the system of suspended liquid or solid particles in air (except cloud 
droplets) and their carrier gas, the air itself. "Ambient_aerosol" means that 
the aerosol is measured or modelled at the ambient state of pressure
 , temperature and relative humidity that exists in its immediate environment. 
"Ambient aerosol particles" are aerosol particles that have taken up ambient 
water through hygroscopic growth. The extent of hygroscopic growth depends on 
the relative humidity and the composition of the particles. To specify the 
relative humidity and temperature at which the quantity described by the 
standard name applies, provide scalar coordinate variables with standard names 
of "relative_humidity" and "air_temperature". Volcanic aerosols include both 
volcanic ash and secondary products such as sulphate aerosols formed from 
gaseous emissions of volcanic eruptions.'

This name is accepted for publication in the standard name table and will be 
added in the May update.


> 3. CMIP6 short name lwtoafluxaerocs: Longwave flux due to volcanic aerosols 
> at TOA under clear sky
>
> Proposed name:
> toa_outgoing_longwave_flux_due_to_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles_assuming_clear_sky
>  (W m-2)

The name and units look fine. I have constructed a definition from existing 
text:
' "toa" means top of atmosphere. The term "longwave" means longwave radiation. 
The TOA outgoing longwave flux is the upwelling thermal radiative flux, often 
called the "outgoing longwave radiation" or "OLR". In accordance with common 
usage in geophysical disciplines, "flux" implies per unit area, called "flux 
density" in physics. The specification of a physical process by the phrase 
"due_to_" process means that the quantity named is a single term in a sum of 
terms which together compose the general quantity named by omitting the phrase. 
"Aerosol" means the system of suspended liquid or solid particles in air 
(except cloud droplets) and their carrier gas, the air itself. 
"Ambient_aerosol" means that the aerosol is measured or modelled at the ambient 
state of pressure, temperature and relative humidity that exists in its 
immediate environment. "Ambient aerosol particles" are aerosol particles that 
have taken up ambient water through hygroscopic growth. The extent of 
hygroscopic growth 
 depends on the relative humidity and the composition of the particles. To 
specify the relative humidity and temperature at which the quantity described 
by the standard name applies, provide scalar coordinate variables with standard 
names of "relative_humidity" and "air_temperature". Volcanic aerosols include 
both volcanic ash and secondary products such as sulphate aerosols formed from 
gaseous emissions of volcanic eruptions. A phrase "assuming_condition" 
indicates that the named quantity is the value which would obtain if all 
aspects of the system were unaltered except for the assumption of the 
circumstances specified by the condition.'

This name is accepted for publication in the standard name table and will be 
added in the May update.

> 4. CMIP6 short name swsffluxaero: Shortwave heating rate due to volcanic 
> aerosols
>
> Proposed name:
> surface_downwelling_longwave_flux_in_air_due_to_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles
>  (W m-2)
> 
> Analogous to lwsffluxaero above

The CMIP short name and description clearly indicate that this is a shortwave 
quantity - I assume that the proposed name was copied and pasted from proposal 
2 and that it should actually be:
surface_downwelling_shortwave_flux_in_air_due_to_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles
 (W m-2)
'The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary of the atmosphere. 
Downwelling radiation is radiation from above. It does not mean "net downward". 
The term "shortwave" means shortwave radiation. When thought of as being 
incident on a surface, a radiative flux is sometimes called "irradiance". In 
addition, it is identical with the quantity measured by a cosine-collector 
light-meter and sometimes called "vector irradiance". In accordance with common 
usage in geophysical disciplines, "flux" implies per unit area, called "flux 
density" in physics. The specification of a physical process by the phrase 
"due_to_" process means that the quantity named is a single term in a sum of 
terms which together compose the general quantity named by omitting the phrase. 
"Aerosol" means the system of suspended liquid or solid particles in air 
(except cloud droplets) and their carrier gas, the air itself. 
"Ambient_aerosol" means that the aerosol is measured or modelled at the ambient 
state of press
 ure, temperature and relative humidity that exists in its immediate 
environment. "Ambient aerosol particles" are aerosol particles that have taken 
up ambient water through hygroscopic growth. The extent of hygroscopic growth 
depends on the relative humidity and the composition of the particles. To 
specify the relative humidity and temperature at which the quantity described 
by the standard name applies, provide scalar coordinate variables with standard 
names of "relative_humidity" and "air_temperature". Volcanic aerosols include 
both volcanic ash and secondary products such as sulphate aerosols formed from 
gaseous emissions of volcanic eruptions.'

The name, units and definition as shown here are accepted for publication in 
the standard name table and will be added in the May update.

> 5. CMIP6 short name swtoafluxaerocs: Shortwave flux due to volcanic aerosols 
> at TOA under clear sky
>
> Proposed name:
> toa_outgoing_shortwave_flux_due_to_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles_assuming_clear_sky
>  (W m-2)

The name and units look fine. I have constructed a definition from existing 
text:
'The abbreviation "toa" means top of atmosphere. The term "shortwave" means 
shortwave radiation. The TOA outgoing shortwave flux is the reflected and 
scattered solar radiative flux i.e. the "upwelling" TOA shortwave flux, 
sometimes called the "outgoing shortwave radiation" or "OSR". In accordance 
with common usage in geophysical disciplines, "flux" implies per unit area, 
called "flux density" in physics. The specification of a physical process by 
the phrase "due_to_" process means that the quantity named is a single term in 
a sum of terms which together compose the general quantity named by omitting 
the phrase. "Aerosol" means the system of suspended liquid or solid particles 
in air (except cloud droplets) and their carrier gas, the air itself. "Ambient 
aerosol particles" are aerosol particles that have taken up ambient water 
through hygroscopic growth. The extent of hygroscopic growth depends on the 
relative humidity and the composition of the particles. To specify the relative 
humi
 dity and temperature at which the quantity described by the standard name 
applies, provide scalar coordinate variables with standard names of 
"relative_humidity" and "air_temperature". Volcanic aerosols include both 
volcanic ash and secondary products such as sulphate aerosols formed from 
gaseous emissions of volcanic eruptions. A phrase "assuming_condition" 
indicates that the named quantity is the value which would obtain if all 
aspects of the system were unaltered except for the assumption of the 
circumstances specified by the condition.'

This name is accepted for publication in the standard name table and will be 
added in the May update.

> 6. zmlwaero: Zonal mean longwave heating rate due to volcanic aerosols
>
> Proposed name:
> tendency_of_air_temperature_due_to_shortwave_heating_from_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles
>  (W m-2)
>
> Comparable to 
> tendency_of_air_temperature_due_to_shortwave_heating_assuming_clear_sky

The CMIP short name and description clearly indicate that this is a longwave 
quantity. The units of a temperature tendency should be K s-1. I assume that 
the proposed name should actually be:
tendency_of_air_temperature_due_to_longwave_heating_from_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles
 (K s-1)
'The phrase "tendency_of_X" means derivative of X with respect to time. Air 
temperature is the bulk temperature of the air, not the surface (skin) 
temperature. The specification of a physical process by the phrase "due_to_" 
process means that the quantity named is a single term in a sum of terms which 
together compose the general quantity named by omitting the phrase. The term 
"longwave" means longwave radiation. "Aerosol" means the system of suspended 
liquid or solid particles in air (except cloud droplets) and their carrier gas, 
the air itself. "Ambient_aerosol" means that the aerosol is measured or 
modelled at the ambient state of pressure, temperature and relative humidity 
that exists in its immediate environment. "Ambient aerosol particles" are 
aerosol particles that have taken up ambient water through hygroscopic growth. 
The extent of hygroscopic growth depends on the relative humidity and the 
composition of the particles. To specify the relative humidity and temperature 
at whi
 ch the quantity described by the standard name applies, provide scalar 
coordinate variables with standard names of "relative_humidity" and 
"air_temperature". Volcanic aerosols include both volcanic ash and secondary 
products such as sulphate aerosols formed from gaseous emissions of volcanic 
eruptions.

The name, units and definition as shown here are accepted for publication in 
the standard name table and will be added in the May update.

> 7. CMIP6 short name zmswaero: Zonal mean shortwave heating rate due to 
> volcanic aerosols
>
> Proposed name:
> tendency_of_air_temperature_due_to_longwave_heating_from_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles
>  (W m-2)
>
> As for zmlwaero

The CMIP short name and description clearly indicate that this is a shortwave 
quantity. The units of a temperature tendency should be K s-1. I assume that 
the proposed name should actually be:
tendency_of_air_temperature_due_to_shortwave_heating_from_volcanic_ambient_aerosol_particles
 (K s-1)
'The phrase "tendency_of_X" means derivative of X with respect to time. Air 
temperature is the bulk temperature of the air, not the surface (skin) 
temperature. The specification of a physical process by the phrase "due_to_" 
process means that the quantity named is a single term in a sum of terms which 
together compose the general quantity named by omitting the phrase. The term 
"shortwave" means shortwave radiation. "Aerosol" means the system of suspended 
liquid or solid particles in air (except cloud droplets) and their carrier gas, 
the air itself. "Ambient aerosol particles" are aerosol particles that have 
taken up ambient water through hygroscopic growth. The extent of hygroscopic 
growth depends on the relative humidity and the composition of the particles. 
To specify the relative humidity and temperature at which the quantity 
described by the standard name applies, provide scalar coordinate variables 
with standard names of "relative_humidity" and "air_temperature". Volcanic 
aeroso
 ls include both volcanic ash and secondary products such as sulphate aerosols 
formed from gaseous emissions of volcanic eruptions.'

This completes the list of standard names needed for VolMIP.

Best wishes,
Alison

------
Alison Pamment                                 Tel: +44 1235 778065
NCAS/Centre for Environmental Data Archival    Email: [email protected]
STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory     
R25, 2.22
Harwell Oxford, Didcot, OX11 0QX, U.K.

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