2020
DOI: 10.1029/2019ms001978
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Historical (1850–2014) Aerosol Evolution and Role on Climate Forcing Using the GISS ModelE2.1 Contribution to CMIP6

Abstract: The Earth's climate is rapidly changing. Over the past centuries, aerosols, via their ability to absorb or scatter solar radiation and alter clouds, played an important role in counterbalancing some of the greenhouse gas (GHG) caused global warming. The multicentury anthropogenic aerosol cooling effect prevented present‐day climate from reaching even higher surface air temperatures and subsequent more dramatic climate impacts. Trends in aerosol concentrations and optical depth show that in many polluted region… Show more

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Cited by 95 publications
(97 citation statements)
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References 119 publications
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“…A large diversity in the historical change in surface O 3 was simulated by CMIP6 models across South Asia and other Northern Hemisphere regions. CMIP6 models predicted larger historical changes in surface O 3 than those from an emissiononly-driven parameterisation, indicating a potential climate change impact (Wu et al, 2008;Bloomer et al, 2009;Weaver et al, 2009;Rasmussen et al, 2013;Colette et al, 2015) on surface O 3 over the historical period. Small global increases in surface PM 2.5 are simulated over the historical period by CMIP6 models, with larger regional changes of up to 12 µg m −3 on an annual mean basis and up to 18 µg m −3 in DJF across East and South Asia.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…A large diversity in the historical change in surface O 3 was simulated by CMIP6 models across South Asia and other Northern Hemisphere regions. CMIP6 models predicted larger historical changes in surface O 3 than those from an emissiononly-driven parameterisation, indicating a potential climate change impact (Wu et al, 2008;Bloomer et al, 2009;Weaver et al, 2009;Rasmussen et al, 2013;Colette et al, 2015) on surface O 3 over the historical period. Small global increases in surface PM 2.5 are simulated over the historical period by CMIP6 models, with larger regional changes of up to 12 µg m −3 on an annual mean basis and up to 18 µg m −3 in DJF across East and South Asia.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…Carslaw et al (2010) reviewed climate feedbacks involving natural and anthropogenic aerosols. Climate change can impact both the source strength of natural aerosols such as sea salt, dust, biomass burning aerosols or their precursors (dimethyl sulfide (DMS), biogenic volatile organic compounds) and the lifetime of natural and anthropogenic aerosols through changes in transport and dry and wet deposition (Bellouin et al, 2011;Raes et al, 2010). Here, we choose to focus especially on those feedbacks that are mediated through changes in the abundances of reactive gases and aerosols, using data from CMIP6 (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 6) (Eyring et al, 2016) Earth system models that conducted the AerChemMIP (Aerosols and Chemistry Model Intercomparison Project) simulations (Collins et al, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…OMA (“One‐Moment Aerosols”): a fully interactive chemistry configuration, described in Bauer et al. (2020). OMA submissions to CMIP6 were denoted as “physics version 3” on the Earth System Grid Federation.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%