Pollution trends over Europe constrain global aerosol forcing as simulated by climate models


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Date

2014-03-28

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

yes

Citations

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Data

Abstract

An increasing trend in surface solar radiation (solar brightening) has been observed over Europe since the 1990s, linked to economic developments and air pollution regulations and their direct as well as cloud-mediated effects on radiation. Here, we find that the all-sky solar brightening trend (1990–2005) over Europe from seven out of eight models (historical simulations in the Fifth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project) scales well with the regional and global mean effective forcing by anthropogenic aerosols (idealized “present-day” minus “preindustrial” runs). The reason for this relationship is that models that simulate stronger forcing efficiencies and stronger radiative effects by aerosol-cloud interactions show both a stronger aerosol forcing and a stronger solar brightening. The all-sky solar brightening is the observable from measurements (4.06±0.60 W m⁻² decade⁻¹), which then allows to infer a global mean total aerosol effective forcing at about −1.30 W m⁻² with standard deviation ±0.40 W m⁻².

Publication status

published

Editor

Book title

Volume

41 (6)

Pages / Article No.

2176 - 2181

Publisher

American Geophysical Union

Event

Edition / version

Methods

Software

Geographic location

Date collected

Date created

Subject

Radiative forcing; CMIP5; Solar brightening

Organisational unit

03360 - Schär, Christoph (emeritus) / Schär, Christoph (emeritus) check_circle

Notes

Funding

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