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Yu, Hongbin, R.E. Dickinson, M. Chin, Y.J. Kaufman, M. Zhou, L. Zhou, Y. Tian, O. Dubovik, and B.N. Holben (2004):
The direct radiative effect of aerosols as determined from a combination of MODIS retrievals and GOCART simulations, J. Geophys. Res., 109, D03206, doi:10.1029/2003JD003914.
Direct radiative effect of aerosols as determined from a
combination of MODIS retrievals and GOCART simulations
Hongbin Yu,1 R. E. Dickinson,1 M. Chin,2 Y. J. Kaufman,2 M. Zhou,1 L. Zhou,1 Y. Tian,1
O. Dubovik,2 and B. N. Holben2
Received 25 June 2003; revised 1 December 2003; accepted 24 December 2003; published 12 February 2004.
[1] The aerosol direct solar effect under clear sky is assessed by (1) combining multiple
aerosol characterizations and (2) using the satellite-retrieved land surface albedo. The
aerosol characterization is made through an integration of the MODerate resolution
Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) retrievals and the Georgia Tech/Goddard Global
Ozone Chemistry Aerosol Radiation and Transport (GOCART) model simulations. The
spectral and bidirectional albedo of land surface is derived from MODIS. On a global
average, the solar forcing at the top of atmosphere (TOA) DFTOA is -4.5 Wm-2, of which
about 1/3 is contributed by a sum of natural and anthropogenic sulfate and carbonaceous
aerosols. Though the optical depth is about 50% higher over land than over ocean, no
significant land-ocean contrast in this TOA forcing is observed. It is reduced by larger
aerosol absorption and higher surface albedo over land. As a result of absorption by soot
and dust, a much larger surface cooling and substantial atmospheric absorption coexist over
land and adjacent oceans. Globally, the surface cooling DFSFC is about -9.9 Wm-2, and
the atmospheric absorption DFAIR is about 5.4 Wm-2, suggesting that more than half of
the surface cooling results from the atmospheric absorption. Sensitivity tests show that an
inclusion of MODIS-derived anisotropy of land surface reflection reduces the diurnal
variation of TOA solar forcing, because of aerosol-induced changes in the fraction of direct
beam and hence in the effective reflection from the surface. Constraining the GOCART
dust absorption with recent measurements reduces DFAIR and DFSFC by 1.3 Wm-2 and
0.9Wm-2, respectively, and increases the TOA cooling by 0.4Wm-2.
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