https://gmd.copernicus.org/articles/17/5913/2024/

*Authors*
Joseph P. Hollowed, Christiane Jablonowski, Hunter Y. Brown, Benjamin R.
Hillman, Diana L. Bull, and Joseph L. Hart

*Citations*: Hollowed, J. P., Jablonowski, C., Brown, H. Y., Hillman, B.
R., Bull, D. L., and Hart, J. L.: HSW-V v1.0: localized injections of
interactive volcanic aerosols and their climate impacts in a simple general
circulation model, Geosci. Model Dev., 17, 5913–5938,
https://doi.org/10.5194/gmd-17-5913-2024, 2024.

*Published: 08 August 2024*

*Abstract*
A new set of standalone parameterizations is presented for simulating the
injection, evolution, and radiative forcing by stratospheric volcanic
aerosols against an idealized Held–Suarez–Williamson (HSW) atmospheric
background in the Energy Exascale Earth System Model version 2 (E3SMv2). In
this model configuration (HSW with enabled volcanism, HSW-V), sulfur
dioxide (SO2) and ash are injected into the atmosphere with a specified
profile in the vertical, and they proceed to follow a simple exponential
decay. The SO2 decay is modeled as a perfect conversion to a long-living
sulfate aerosol which persists in the stratosphere. All three species are
implemented as tracers in the model framework and are transported by the
dynamical core's advection algorithm. The aerosols contribute
simultaneously to local heating of the stratosphere and cooling of the
surface by a simple plane-parallel Beer–Lambert law applied on two zonally
symmetric radiation broadbands in the longwave and shortwave ranges. It is
shown that the implementation parameters can be tuned to produce realistic
temperature anomaly signatures of large volcanic events. In particular,
results are shown for an ensemble of runs that mimic the volcanic eruption
of Mt. Pinatubo in 1991. The design requires no coupling to microphysical
subgrid-scale parameterizations and thus approaches the computational
affordability of prescribed aerosol forcing strategies. The idealized
simulations contain a single isolated volcanic event against a
statistically uniform climate, where no background aerosols or other
sources of externally forced variability are present. HSW-V represents a
simpler-to-understand tool for the development of climate source-to-impact
attribution methods.

*Source: EGU*

-- 
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 view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAHJsh9-_upO1Pd2xHrTmR-4pn-JohLfukDP5%3Dy5xee%2B%2B90AjCQ%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to