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Characterization of Wildfire-Induced Aerosol Emissions From the Maritime Continent Peatland and Central African Dry Savannah with MISR and CALIPSO Aerosol Products SCIE SCOPUS

Title
Characterization of Wildfire-Induced Aerosol Emissions From the Maritime Continent Peatland and Central African Dry Savannah with MISR and CALIPSO Aerosol Products
Authors
Lee, HuikyoJeong, Su-JongKalashnikova, OlgaTosca, MikaKim, Sang-WooKug, Jong-Seong
Date Issued
2018-03
Publisher
AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
Abstract
Aerosol plumes from wildfires affect the Earth's climate system through regulation of the radiative budget and clouds. However, optical properties of aerosols from individual wildfire smoke plumes and their resultant impact on regional climate are highly variable. Therefore, there is a critical need for observations that can constrain the partitioning between different types of aerosols. Here we present the apparent influence of regional ecosystem types on optical properties of wildfire-induced aerosols based on remote sensing observations from two satellite instruments and three ground stations. The independent observations commonly show that the ratio of the absorbing aerosols is significantly lower in smoke plumes from the Maritime Continent than those from Central Africa, so that their impacts on regional climate are different. The observed light-absorbing properties of wildfire-induced aerosols are explained by dominant ecosystem types such as wet peatlands for the Maritime Continent and dry savannah for Central Africa, respectively. These results suggest that the wildfire-aerosol-climate feedback processes largely depend on the terrestrial environments from which the fires originate. These feedbacks also interact with climate under greenhouse warming. Our analysis shows that aerosol optical properties retrieved based on satellite observations are critical in assessing wildfire-induced aerosols forcing in climate models. The optical properties of carbonaceous aerosol mixtures used by state-of-the-art chemistry climate models may overestimate emissions for absorbing aerosols from wildfires over the Maritime Continent.
URI
https://oasis.postech.ac.kr/handle/2014.oak/95936
DOI
10.1002/2017JD027415
ISSN
2169-897X
Article Type
Article
Citation
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, vol. 123, no. 6, page. 3116 - 3125, 2018-03
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국종성KUG, JONG SEONG
Div of Environmental Science & Enginrg
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