Poster's note : method described may possibly be applicable to studies of
aerosol geoengineering - eg impact on monsoons

http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00382-015-2671-5/fulltext.html

Preferred response of the East Asian summer monsoon to local and non-local
anthropogenic sulphur dioxide emissions

Buwen Dong, Rowan T. Sutton, Eleanor J. Highwood and Laura J. Wilcox

Buwen Dong
Email: [email protected]
Published online: 28 May 2015

Abstract
In this study, the atmospheric component of a state-of-the-art climate
model (HadGEM2-ES) that includes earth system components such as
interactive chemistry and eight species of tropospheric aerosols
considering aerosol direct, indirect, and semi-direct effects, has been
used to investigate the impacts of local and non-local emissions of
anthropogenic sulphur dioxide on the East Asian summer monsoon (EASM). The
study focuses on the fast responses (including land surface feedbacks, but
without sea surface temperature feedbacks) to sudden changes in emissions
from Asia and Europe. The initial responses, over days 1–40, to Asian and
European emissions show large differences. The response to Asian emissions
involves a direct impact on the sulphate burden over Asia, with immediate
consequences for the shortwave energy budget through aerosol–radiation and
aerosol–cloud interactions. These changes lead to cooling of East Asia and
a weakening of the EASM. In contrast, European emissions have no
significant impact on the sulphate burden over Asia, but they induce
mid-tropospheric cooling and drying over the European sector. Subsequently,
however, this cold and dry anomaly is advected into Asia, where it induces
atmospheric and surface feedbacks over Asia and the Western North Pacific
(WNP), which also weaken the EASM. In spite of very different perturbations
to the local aerosol burden in response to Asian and European sulphur
dioxide emissions, the large scale pattern of changes in land–sea thermal
contrast, atmospheric circulation and local precipitation over East Asia
from days 40 onward exhibits similar structures, indicating a preferred
response, and suggesting that emissions from both regions likely
contributed to the observed weakening of the EASM. Cooling and drying of
the troposphere over Asia, together with warming and moistening over the
WNP, reduces the land–sea thermal contrast between the Asian continent and
surrounding oceans. This leads to high sea level pressure (SLP) anomalies
over Asia and low SLP anomalies over the WNP, associated with a weakened
EASM. In response to emissions from both regions warming and moistening
over the WNP plays an important role and determines the time scale of the
response.

Keywords East Asian summer monsoon Aerosol–radiation and aerosol–cloud
interactions Land–sea thermal contrast Fast responses

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