Present‐day climate forcing and response from black carbon in snow
University of California, Irvine · NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research
Abstract
We apply our Snow, Ice, and Aerosol Radiative (SNICAR) model, coupled to a general circulation model with prognostic carbon aerosol transport, to improve understanding of climate forcing and response from black carbon (BC) in snow. Building on two previous studies, we account for interannually varying biomass burning BC emissions, snow aging, and aerosol scavenging by snow meltwater. We assess uncertainty in forcing estimates from these factors, as well as BC optical properties and snow cover fraction. BC emissions are the largest source of uncertainty, followed by snow aging. The rate of snow aging determines snowpack effective radius ( r e ), which directly controls snow reflectance and the magnitude of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 36.81
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 85
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Radiative forcing
- Snow
- Forcing (mathematics)
- Meltwater
- Environmental science
- Atmospheric sciences
- Albedo (alchemy)
- Snowpack