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Spatial Representativeness Error in the Ground-Level Observation Networks for Black Carbon Radiation Absorption.
Wang, Rong; Andrews, Elisabeth; Balkanski, Yves; Boucher, Olivier; Myhre, Gunnar; Samset, Bjørn Hallvard; Schulz, Michael; Schuster, Gregory L; Valari, Myrto; Tao, Shu.
  • Wang R; Department of Environmental Science and Engineering Fudan University Shanghai China.
  • Andrews E; Department of Global Ecology Carnegie Institution for Science Stanford CA USA.
  • Balkanski Y; Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement CEA CNRS UVSQ Gif-sur-Yvette France.
  • Boucher O; CIRES University of Colorado Boulder CO USA.
  • Myhre G; Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement CEA CNRS UVSQ Gif-sur-Yvette France.
  • Samset BH; Institut Pierre-Simon Laplace CNRS /Université Pierre et Marie Curie Paris France.
  • Schulz M; CICERO Center for International Climate and Environmental Research Oslo Norway.
  • Schuster GL; CICERO Center for International Climate and Environmental Research Oslo Norway.
  • Valari M; Norwegian Meteorological Institute Oslo Norway.
  • Tao S; NASA Langley Research Center Hampton VA USA.
Geophys Res Lett ; 45(4): 2106-2114, 2018 Feb 28.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29937603
ABSTRACT
There is high uncertainty in the direct radiative forcing of black carbon (BC), an aerosol that strongly absorbs solar radiation. The observation-constrained estimate, which is several times larger than the bottom-up estimate, is influenced by the spatial representativeness error due to the mesoscale inhomogeneity of the aerosol fields and the relatively low resolution of global chemistry-transport models. Here we evaluated the spatial representativeness error for two widely used observational networks (AErosol RObotic NETwork and Global Atmosphere Watch) by downscaling the geospatial grid in a global model of BC aerosol absorption optical depth to 0.1° × 0.1°. Comparing the models at a spatial resolution of 2° × 2° with BC aerosol absorption at AErosol RObotic NETwork sites (which are commonly located near emission hot spots) tends to cause a global spatial representativeness error of 30%, as a positive bias for the current top-down estimate of global BC direct radiative forcing. By contrast, the global spatial representativeness error will be 7% for the Global Atmosphere Watch network, because the sites are located in such a way that there are almost an equal number of sites with positive or negative representativeness error.
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