AERO Earth: Global Aerosol Measurement, Modeling, and Analysis
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Publications: Abstract

Kaufman, Y. J., O. Boucher, D. Tanre, M. Chin, L. A. Remer, and T. Takemura, 2005: Aerosol anthropogenic component estimated from satellite data. Geophys. Res. Lett. 32, L17804, doi:10/1029/2005GL023125.

   

Satellite instruments do not measure the aerosol chemical composition needed to discriminate anthropogenic from natural aerosol components. Besides, the same sulfate or organic compounds can have natural and anthropogenic origins. However the ability of the new satellite instruments (such as POLDER, MODIS, or MISR) to distinguish fine (i.e. submicron) from coarse aerosols over the oceans, serves as a signature of the anthropogenic component (1) and can be used to estimate the fraction of the aerosol originating from anthropogenic activity with an uncertainty of ±30%. Application to two years of global MODIS data shows that 21±7% of the aerosol optical thickness (a measure of the aerosol column concentration) over the oceans has an anthropogenic origin. We found that three chemical transport models, used for global estimates of the aerosol forcing of climate, calculate a global average anthropogenic optical thickness over the ocean between 0.030 and 0.036, in line with the present MODIS assessment of 0.033. This increases our confidence in model assessments (2) of the aerosol direct forcing of climate. The MODIS estimated aerosol forcing over cloud free oceans is therefore -1.4±0.4 W/m2. 

  

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