https://eos.org/editors-vox/blowin-in-the-wind-observing-stratospheric-aerosols

Blowin’ in the Wind: Observing Stratospheric Aerosols

New observations and understanding of stratospheric particles are crucial
for evaluating their role in climate change.

By Alan Robock 21 April 2016

Stratospheric aerosols play an important role in controlling Earth’s
radiative balance, particularly after volcanic eruptions. Although there
have been no major volcanic eruptions since the 1991 Mt. Pinatubo blast in
the Philippines, the role of minor eruptions during the past decade has
been of interest as part of the explanation of the rate of global warming
during that period. New satellite and ground-based capabilities have given
us important new insights into measuring and characterizing the
stratospheric aerosol loading, as summarized in the recentReviews of
Geophysics paper “Stratospheric aerosol – Observations, processes, and
impact on climate” by Kremser et al. The team of 34 authors who wrote this
paper include virtually all the experts on this topic from around the
world, and the paper clearly describes the state of current technology as
well as existing gaps that can be filled. As we now work to produce a
stratospheric aerosol data set for use in the upcoming CMIP6 climate model
simulations, the results of this paper, and many of the authors, will play
a crucial role. AGU asked the authors of the article to highlight the
important results that have emerged from their research and some of the
important questions that remain.

Why is this topic timely and important?

The stratospheric aerosol layer is a key component of the climate system as
it directly affects how the incoming solar radiation is absorbed and
scattered in the Earth’s atmosphere. Stratospheric aerosol plays a crucial
role in ozone chemistry through chemical reactions that occur on the
surface of aerosol (called heterogeneous reactions). From 1960 to 2000,
most stratospheric aerosol observations occurred during a period that was
dominated by a few large volcanic eruptions followed by a decade of slow
recovery toward background levels. In the early 2000s, aerosol reached the
lowest levels observed by modern instruments, followed by a general
increase primarily due to a series of small volcanic events. This
relatively clean period is of significant interest, since it has previously
been difficult to infer the role that non-volcanic sources, natural and
human-derived, play in maintaining the stratospheric aerosol levels. The
last 15 years provide an important window in which to infer the impact on
stratospheric aerosol concentrations of emissions from the ocean, the
biosphere, and human activities. The subtle changes to the stratospheric
aerosol levels throughout the last 15 years may have played a subtle role
in modifying climate, but the scale of these small but not insignificant
effects remains difficult to assess.

What recent advances in particular are leading to a new understanding or
synthesis?

In the previous comprehensive review on stratospheric aerosol in 2006, a
major challenge was the discrepancy between in situ and space-based
inferences of aerosol properties, particularly during low aerosol loading
periods. These differences have been substantially closed due to improved
understanding of both the in situ and space-based measurements. In
addition, there have been major advances in the ability of models to
reproduce observed surface temperatures following major volcanic events
like the 1991 eruption of Mount Pinatubo. Some climate models now contain
aerosol modules which produce, transport, and remove aerosol internally,
rather than depend on prescribed data sets. While there is much refinement
to do, these developments point to an improved understanding of how
stratospheric aerosol affects climate, and soon to an understanding of how
climate impacts aerosol. Current estimates of the non-volcanic source of
aerosol and its gas precursors to the stratosphere are about 50% higher
than estimated in 2006 mostly due to an improved understanding of the
emissions of key sulfur containing gases. There is also a new appreciation
for the importance of non-sulfate aerosol, such as organics and meteoritic
material, in the stratosphere.

What are the societal implications of the new understanding?

Improvements in our ability to measure and to model stratospheric aerosol
provides a new found capability to fully account for stratospheric aerosol
in global climate simulations. Accounting for stratospheric aerosol is part
of understanding global warming and communicating the complexities of the
climate system to the public. In the event of another major, potentially
catastrophic, volcanic eruption national and international agencies will
need a rapid assessment of the immediate impact on surface temperatures and
the longer term climate. Advancements in climate modelling means better
assessments of impacts on temperature, rainfall, ocean temperatures, and
ultimately on agriculture and human life. The Tambora eruption of 1815
leading to the “year without a summer” in 1816 and worldwide crop failures
and famine, demonstrated clearly that volcanism can impact human livelihood
on a global scale. Recognition of this potential has made intentionally
increasing stratospheric aerosol, to counteract a warming climate, a
favored candidate for geoengineering. Without fully understanding the
impact of changes in stratospheric aerosol levels on surface climate and
stratospheric chemistry, the impact and side effects of artificially
enhanced stratospheric aerosol levels cannot be fully assessed.

What are the major unsolved or unresolved questions and where are
additional data or modeling efforts needed?

The role of man-made sulfur dioxide (SO2) in contributing to maintaining
and modifying the stratospheric aerosol layer remains an unknown. The
research to discern human and natural contributions to SO2 is complicated
by the dearth of reliable measurements of SO2, particularly at the low
concentrations required. Measurements in the tropical upper troposphere and
lower stratosphere at background levels for SO2 (<10 ppt) are needed to
understand the flux of SO2 into the stratosphere. More robust modelling of
the pathways for SO2, particularly from Asia would help to illuminate the
contribution of human activities on SO2reaching the stratosphere. In
addition, not much is currently known about how climate change, in turn,
affects the production of stratospheric aerosol precursors like carbonyl
sulfide (OCS) and dimethyl sulfide (DMS).

Maintaining a continuous observational record of stratospheric aerosol is
essential to detect modest changes in aerosol levels due to changes in
natural and anthropogenic emissions and to maintain a test bed for testing
of future climate models.  Maintaining continuity has proven to be
challenging due to changes in instrumentation and measurement approaches
over the past decade. Unlike many measurements, stratospheric aerosol is
primarily measured by a few optical properties from which more detailed
properties are inferred. Changes in the measurement techniques which
occurred in the middle of the last decade from primarily solar occultation
to space-based lidar and limb scatter observations, means that the primary
measurements, each with their own strengths and limitations, changed fairly
abruptly and represent a significant challenge to the continuity of the
aerosol measurement record. We can expect further changes on measurements
techniques. How stratospheric aerosol will be measured from space past 2020
is not presently known. Space measurements are also crucially dependent on
long-term in situ measurements to provide context to the aerosol
properties, which cannot be directly inferred from optical measurements.
Funding limitations make the maintenance of crucial long term records
difficult.

The mechanism of how trace gases, including sulfur and sulfur compounds,
cross the tropopause into the stratosphere is still a major research topic.
It is suspected that the Pacific warm pool, as the gateway to the
stratosphere, plays an important role. A number of measurement campaigns
and a large coordinated project have been initiated this year to perform
targeted measurements of sulfur compounds in the tropical region to address
this key question.

—Alan Robock, Editor, Reviews of Geophysics; email:[email protected]

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/geoengineering.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to