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Potential alteration of ice clouds by aircraft soot. Joyce E. Penner and Xiaohong Liu Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences University of Michigan Aviation, Atmosphere and Climate 30 June - 3 July 2003 Friedrichshafen, Germany.
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Potential alteration of ice clouds by aircraft soot Joyce E. Penner and Xiaohong Liu Department of Atmospheric, Oceanic and Space Sciences University of Michigan Aviation, Atmosphere and Climate 30 June - 3 July 2003 Friedrichshafen, Germany
Evidence for alteration of ice clouds by aircraft emissions • Soot associated with increasing ice concentrations in regions of enhanced soot most probably due to aircraft (Ström and Ohlsson, 1998) • Trend difference in high clouds observed over regions with Computed Contrail cover > 0.5% was 3.5%/decade (land) and 1.6%/decade (ocean) between 1984 and1990 (ISCCP data) (Fahey and Schumann et al. (2001)) • Model results: • Jensen and Toon [1997] • Lohmann [2000]
Mechanisms forming ice clouds • Homogeneous nucleation • Jhaze = Jw(Teff);Teff= T+lDTm • Deposition nucleation • Js’=(4p2rN2Zse)/(2pln(kT))1/2ag2cl,sexp[-DFg,S/kT] • Fg,S=[16pMw2si/v3]/[3(RTriln Sv,i)2]f(mi,v,x); mi,v =0.9 • or: Meyer’s empirical formulation: • Nid=exp{a+b[100(RHi-1]} • Immersion nucleation • Js’=(4p2rN2kT)/(h) c1,S exp[-Dg*/(RT)-DFg,S/(kT)] • Fg.S=[16pMw2si/v3]/(3[Lm,0ri ln (T0/Te)]2) f(mi,w,x); mi,w =0.5 • Contact nucleation
Parameterization for homogeneous ice formation • T ≥ 6.07 ln w - 55.0 (fast growth; high T low w): • Ni=min{exp(a2+b2T+c2lnw)Naa1+b1T+c1lnw , Na} • T<6.07 ln w - 55.0 (slow growth; low T high w): • Ni=min{exp(a4+(b4+b5lnw) T+c4lnw)Naa3+b3T+c3lnw , Na}
Homogeneous + deposition nucleation • Lower updraft velocities and higher temperatures=> deposition nucleation only: • Threshold: T 14.387 ln(w) - 18.825; and w 0.3 m/s • Si (%) = a T + b; • where a and b are a function of w • Use with Meyer’s (1992) parameterization • Use homogeneous parameterization at higher updrafts and lower temperatures
Homogeneous, deposition, and immersion freezing • Threshold temperature for immersion, deposition freezing: • T a ln(w) + b • a, b are functions of the number of soot particles Ns • Immersion freezing: • Ni,s=min{exp(a22)Nsb22exp(bT)wc, Ns} • b, c are functions of ln Ns • Deposition freezing: • Maximum supersaturation; Simax(%) = A T2 + BT + C • A, B, C are functions of w • Number of ice crystals from Meyer’s (1992) parameterization for deposition • Use homogeneous parameterization at lower T
Immersion nucleation: ice crystal number D = -60C = -40C W=0.5 m s-1 W=-0.04 m s-1 Sulphate = 200 cm-3
Homogeneous nucleation: ice crystal number W=1.0 m s-1 W=0.04 m s-1 T=-40C T=-40C T=-60C T=-60C T=-80C T=-80C 10 100 1000 Sulfate aerosol concentration (cm-3) Sulfate aerosol concentration (cm-3)
IMPACT/DAO • Uses NASA DAO 1997 meteorological fields • Uses IPCC-recommended emissions inventories except for dust (from Ginoux for 1997 DAO winds) • Emissions put into BL for dust and biomass burning • Wet scavenging as in Harvard GEOS-CHEM model except that large scale scavenging uses 0.5 g/m3 for LWC • Dry deposition as in Zhang, Gong et al. [AE, 2001]
Unique features • DAO version has improved LWC for sulfate chemistry • GMI model is based on IMPACT • We can compare these results with more than one set of meteorological fields: • IMPACT/DAO=GMI/DAO • GMI/MACCCM3 • GMI/GISSII’
Comparison of burdens: GMI models for 1995 ff BC • Burden wet dry Lifetime • (Tg) (Tg/yr) (Tg/yr) (days) • DAO 0.058 7.17 1.75 2.40 • GISS 0.080 6.92 2.04 3.26 • NCAR 0.060 7.31 1.88 2.4 • GRANTOUR/CCM1 ffBC+bbBC: • 0.20 9.56 2.66 5.97 • DAO* 0.14 5.00 1.65 7.52
DAO GISS Fuel tracer: ng/g BC Burdens: DAO 3.3e-4 Tg GISS 5.7e-4 Tg NCAR 4.1e-4 Tg NCAR
Zonal mean ice number (cm-3), heterogeneous + homogeneous nucleation, surface sources
Difference in ice concentration between heterogeneous + homogeneous and homogeneous only (cm-3), surface sources
Concentration of ice (cm-3) Aircraft + surface sources Surface aerosol sources
Difference in ice concentration between surface + aircraft aerosol sources and surface only sources (cm-3)
Conclusion • An initial assessment of the potential impact of aircraft emissions on ice concentrations indicates significant increases (O˜100%) in zonal mean concentrations near flight corridors • Better quantification requires a better simulation of upper tropospheric humidity together with full representation of all aerosol types and their mode of nucleation