4.7 Article

Modelling sea salt aerosol and its direct and indirect effects on climate

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages 1311-1327

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-8-1311-2008

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A size-dependent sea salt aerosol parameterization was developed based on the piecewise log-normal approximation (PLA) for aerosol size distributions. Results of this parameterization from simulations with a global climate model produce good agreement with observations at the surface and for vertically-integrated volume size distributions. The global and annual mean of the sea salt burden is 10.1 mg m(-2). The direct radiative forcing is calculated to be -1.52 and -0.60 W m(-2) for clear sky and all sky, respectively. The first indirect radiative forcing is about twice as large as the direct forcing for all-sky (-1.34 W m(-2)). The results also show that the total indirect forcing of sea salt is -2.9 W m(-2) if climatic feedbacks are taken into account. The sensitivity of the forcings to changes in the burdens and sizes of sea salt particles was also investigated based on additional simulations with a different sea salt source function.

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