Report Calls Aerosol Research Key to Improving Climate Predictions

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Jan. 16, 2009

Stephen Cole 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-0918 
stephen.e.cole@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 09-009

REPORT CALLS AEROSOL RESEARCH KEY TO IMPROVING CLIMATE PREDICTIONS

WASHINGTON -- Scientists need a more detailed understanding of how 
human-produced atmospheric particles, called aerosols, affect climate 
in order to produce better predictions of Earth's future climate, 
according to a NASA-led report issued by the U.S. Climate Change 
Science Program on Friday. 

"Atmospheric Aerosol Properties and Climate Impacts," is the latest in 
a series of Climate Change Science Program reports that addresses 
various aspects of the country's highest priority climate research, 
observation and decision-support needs. The study's authors include 
scientists from NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration and the Department of Energy. 

"The influence of aerosols on climate is not yet adequately taken into 
account in our computer predictions of climate," said Mian Chin, 
report coordinating lead author from NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center in Greenbelt, Md. "An improved representation of aerosols in 
climate models is essential to more accurately predict the climate 
changes." 

Aerosols are suspended solid or liquid particles in the air that often 
are visible as dust, smoke and haze. Aerosols come from a variety of 
natural and human processes. On a global basis, the bulk of aerosols 
originate from natural sources, mainly sea salt, dust and wildfires. 
Human-produced aerosols arise primarily from a variety of combustion 
sources. They can be the dominant form of aerosol in and downwind of 
highly populated and industrialized regions, and in areas of intense 
agricultural burning. 

Although Earth's atmosphere consists primarily of gases, aerosols and 
clouds play significant roles in shaping conditions at the surface 
and in the lower atmosphere. Aerosols typically range in diameter 
from a few nanometers to a few tens of micrometers. They exhibit a 
wide range of compositions and shapes, but aerosols between 0.05 and 
10 micrometers in diameter dominate aerosols' direct interaction with 
sunlight. Aerosols also can produce changes in cloud properties and 
precipitation, which, in turn, affect climate. 

Current predictions of how much Earth's average surface temperature 
will increase in the future fall in a wide range. If the amount of 
carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases double from the levels in 
the atmosphere in 1990, the increase in temperature is expected to be 
from 2.2 to 7.9 degrees Fahrenheit, according to the U.N. 
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. The role of greenhouse 
gases in global warming is fairly well established, but the degree to 
which the cooling effect of human-produced aerosols offsets the 
warming is still inadequately understood. The report states that 
scientists should strive to improve their understanding of aerosols' 
climate influences with the goal of cutting that range of uncertainty 
by nearly two-thirds. 

The report states that to achieve the goal of reducing uncertainties 
in aerosol impacts on climate, an advanced, multi-disciplinary 
approach that integrates surface, aircraft, and space-based 
measurements with models will have to be developed. Scientists have 
made gains in modeling aerosol effects, but this capability has not 
yet been fully incorporated into climate simulations, according to 
the report. 

The report advocates the development of new space-based, field, and 
laboratory instruments and the incorporation of more realistic 
simulations of aerosol, cloud, and atmospheric processes into climate 
models. The United States faces the challenge of maintaining and 
enhancing its existing aerosol monitoring capability from space. 
Satellites have been providing global aerosol observations since the 
late 1970s, with major improvements in accuracy since the late 1990s. 
But some of these missions, such as NASA's suite of Earth Observing 
System satellites, are reaching or exceeding their design lives, the 
report notes. 

The complete report is available at: 



http://www.climatescience.gov/Library/sap/sap2-3/default.php 

	
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