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  4. Optical and physical characteristics of aerosols over Asia: AERONET, MERRA-2 and CAMS
 
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Optical and physical characteristics of aerosols over Asia: AERONET, MERRA-2 and CAMS

Source
Atmospheric Environment
ISSN
13522310
Date Issued
2024-06-01
Author(s)
Ansari, Kamran
Ramachandran, S.
DOI
10.1016/j.atmosenv.2024.120470
Volume
326
Abstract
A comprehensive study on the regional and spatial distributions of aerosol columnar optical and physical characteristics utilizing high-quality Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) datasets over Asia (Central, South, South-East, and East Asia), along with spatiotemporal collocated validation of two highly-spatially resolved models (Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications-2 (MERRA-2) and Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service (CAMS)) simulated aerosol optical depth (AOD) and Ångström exponent (AE) on annual and seasonal scales, is conducted for the first time. AOD is the highest over South Asia in each season, followed by South-East, East, and Central Asia. Annual regional average AOD at 0.50 μm over South Asia is 0.61. Combined influence of both fine mode anthropogenic aerosol emissions from fossil fuel combustion and biomass burning, and coarse mode dust aerosols from seasonal transport lead to higher AOD and total volume concentration (TVC), and exhibit significant spatiotemporal variations. Coarse volume fraction (CVF) and effective radius (R<inf>eff</inf>) are higher over Central Asia due to the dominance of coarse dust aerosols. East and South-East Asia are dominated by fine mode aerosols and result in higher fine volume concentration (FVC), AE, fine mode fraction (FMF), and lower R<inf>eff</inf>. Compared to the other regions of the globe (except Africa), AOD is higher over Asia, with higher spatiotemporal variabilities in AOD, AE, FMF, and TVC. Over Asia, the agreement between AERONET and CAMS AOD is better than that of AERONET and MERRA-2 AOD. For high AOD conditions, underestimation in model AODs is higher, and lower fraction of model AODs satisfy the Global Climate Observing System (GCOS) requirement over all regions, and these are more pronounced over Asia. Biases in model AODs are higher over Asia compared to the other regions of the globe, and lower over North America, Europe, and Australia. Higher bias in model AEs compared to AODs over all the regions shows substantial challenges in simulating spectral AOD and appropriate contributions of fine and coarse mode aerosols. These findings over a global aerosol hotspot region, Asia, along with other regions of the globe are crucial for accurate simulation and fine-tuning of aerosol characteristics by regional and global models, and for reducing uncertainties in the assessment of radiative and climate impact of aerosols.
Unpaywall
URI
https://d8.irins.org/handle/IITG2025/28891
Subjects
AERONET observations | Aerosol optical depth | Aerosol volume concentration | Asia and rest of the world | MERRA-2 and CAMS simulations | Ångström exponent
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