Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Mar 2013)

Intercomparison of shortwave radiative transfer schemes in global aerosol modeling: results from the AeroCom Radiative Transfer Experiment

  • C. A. Randles,
  • S. Kinne,
  • G. Myhre,
  • M. Schulz,
  • P. Stier,
  • J. Fischer,
  • L. Doppler,
  • E. Highwood,
  • C. Ryder,
  • B. Harris,
  • J. Huttunen,
  • Y. Ma,
  • R. T. Pinker,
  • B. Mayer,
  • D. Neubauer,
  • R. Hitzenberger,
  • L. Oreopoulos,
  • D. Lee,
  • G. Pitari,
  • G. Di Genova,
  • J. Quaas,
  • F. G. Rose,
  • S. Kato,
  • S. T. Rumbold,
  • I. Vardavas,
  • N. Hatzianastassiou,
  • C. Matsoukas,
  • H. Yu,
  • F. Zhang,
  • H. Zhang,
  • P. Lu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-13-2347-2013
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
pp. 2347 – 2379

Abstract

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In this study we examine the performance of 31 global model radiative transfer schemes in cloud-free conditions with prescribed gaseous absorbers and no aerosols (Rayleigh atmosphere), with prescribed scattering-only aerosols, and with more absorbing aerosols. Results are compared to benchmark results from high-resolution, multi-angular line-by-line radiation models. For purely scattering aerosols, model bias relative to the line-by-line models in the top-of-the atmosphere aerosol radiative forcing ranges from roughly −10 to 20%, with over- and underestimates of radiative cooling at lower and higher solar zenith angle, respectively. Inter-model diversity (relative standard deviation) increases from ~10 to 15% as solar zenith angle decreases. Inter-model diversity in atmospheric and surface forcing decreases with increased aerosol absorption, indicating that the treatment of multiple-scattering is more variable than aerosol absorption in the models considered. Aerosol radiative forcing results from multi-stream models are generally in better agreement with the line-by-line results than the simpler two-stream schemes. Considering radiative fluxes, model performance is generally the same or slightly better than results from previous radiation scheme intercomparisons. However, the inter-model diversity in aerosol radiative forcing remains large, primarily as a result of the treatment of multiple-scattering. Results indicate that global models that estimate aerosol radiative forcing with two-stream radiation schemes may be subject to persistent biases introduced by these schemes, particularly for regional aerosol forcing.