Stratospheric heating by potential geoengineering aerosols
Abstract
A fixed dynamical heating model is used to investigate the pattern of zonal-mean stratospheric temperature change resulting from geoengineering with aerosols composed of sulfate, titania, limestone and soot. Aerosol always heats the tropical lower stratosphere, but at the poles the response can be either heating, cooling, or neutral. The sign of the change in stratospheric Pole-Equator temperature difference depends on aerosol type, size and season. This has implications for modeling geoengineering impacts and the response of the stratospheric circulation.
- Publication:
-
Geophysical Research Letters
- Pub Date:
- December 2011
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2011GeoRL..3824706F
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Aerosols and particles (0345;
- 4801;
- 4906);
- Atmospheric Composition and Structure: Radiation: transmission and scattering;
- Global Change: Atmosphere (0315;
- 0325)