Persistent Stratospheric Warming Due to 2019-2020 Australian Wildfire Smoke
["Yu, Pengfei","Davis, Sean M","Toon, Owen B","Portmann, Robert W","Bardeen, Charles G","Barnes, John E","Telg, Hagen","Maloney, Christopher","Rosenlof, Karen H"]
2021-04-16
期刊论文
(7)
Australian wildfires burning from December 2019 to January 2020 injected approximately 0.9 Tg of smoke into the stratosphere; this is the largest amount observed in the satellite era. A comparison of numerical simulations to satellite observations of the plume rise suggests that the smoke mass contained 2.5% black carbon. Model calculations project a 1 K warming in the stratosphere of the Southern Hemisphere midlatitudes for more than 6 months following the injection of black-carbon containing smoke. The 2020 average global mean clear sky effective radiative forcing at top of atmosphere is estimated to be -0.03 W m(-2) with a surface value of -0.32 W m(-2). Assuming that smoke particles coat with sulfuric acid in the stratosphere and have similar heterogeneous reaction rates as sulfate aerosol, we estimate a smoke-induced chemical decrease in total column ozone of 10-20 Dobson units from August to December in mid-high southern latitudes.
来源平台:GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS