The Relative Roles of Sulfate Aerosols and Greenhouse Gases in Climate Forcing
- 16 April 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 260 (5106), 311-314
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.260.5106.311
Abstract
Calculations of the effects of both natural and anthropogenic tropospheric sulfate aerosols indicate that the aerosol climate forcing is sufficiently large in a number of regions of the Northern Hemisphere to reduce significantly the positive forcing from increased greenhouse gases. Summer sulfate aerosol forcing in the Northern Hemisphere completely offsets the greenhouse forcing over the eastern United States and central Europe. Anthropogenic sulfate aerosols contribute a globally averaged annual forcing of –0.3 watt per square meter as compared with +2.1 watts per square meter for greenhouse gases. Sources of the difference in magnitude with the previous estimate of Charlson et al. are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Anthropogenic influence on the distribution of tropospheric sulphate aerosolNature, 1992
- Effects of Aerosol from Biomass Burning on the Global Radiation BudgetScience, 1992
- Climate Forcing by Anthropogenic AerosolsScience, 1992
- Perturbation of the northern hemisphere radiative balance by backscattering from anthropogenic sulfate aerosols*Tellus A: Dynamic Meteorology and Oceanography, 1991
- In situ rapid-response measurement of sulfuric acid/ammonium sulfate aerosols in rural VirginiaEnvironmental Science & Technology, 1982
- The Origin of Haze in the Central United States and Its Effect on Solar IrradiationJournal of Applied Meteorology, 1982
- On the proportionality of fine mass concentration and extinction coefficient for bimodal size distributionsAtmospheric Environment (1967), 1981
- The physical characteristics of sulfur aerosolsAtmospheric Environment (1967), 1978
- Sulfate Aerosol: Its Geographical Extent in the Midwestern and Southern United StatesScience, 1977
- The Backscattered Fraction in two-stream ApproximationsJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 1976