Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing

The aerosols in the Indo-Gangetic Basin (IGB) are a mixture of sulfate, dust, black carbon, and other soluble and insoluble components. It is a challenge not only to identify these various aerosol types, but also to assess the optical and radiative implications of these components. In the present st...

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Main Authors: Tiwari, S, Srivastava, AK, Singh, AK, Singh, S
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: Springer 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://moeseprints.incois.gov.in/4224/
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11356-015-4495-6
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spelling ftmoes:oai:moeseprints.incois.gov.in:4224 2023-05-15T13:06:35+02:00 Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing Tiwari, S Srivastava, AK Singh, AK Singh, S 2015-08 http://moeseprints.incois.gov.in/4224/ http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11356-015-4495-6 unknown Springer Tiwari, S and Srivastava, AK and Singh, AK and Singh, S (2015) Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 22. pp. 12246-12260. Meteorology and Climatology Article PeerReviewed 2015 ftmoes 2022-01-12T07:35:21Z The aerosols in the Indo-Gangetic Basin (IGB) are a mixture of sulfate, dust, black carbon, and other soluble and insoluble components. It is a challenge not only to identify these various aerosol types, but also to assess the optical and radiative implications of these components. In the present study, appropriate thresholds for fine-mode fraction and single-scattering albedo have been used to first identify the aerosol types over IGB. Four major aerosol types may be identified as polluted dust (PD), polluted continental (PC), black carbon-enriched (BCE), and organic carbon-enriched (OCE). Further, the implications of these different types of aerosols on optical properties and radiative forcing have been studied. The aerosol products derived from CIMEL sun/sky radiometer measurements, deployed under Aerosol Robotic Network program of NASA, USA were used from four different sites Karachi, Lahore, Jaipur, and Kanpur, spread over Pakistan and Northern India. PD is the most dominant aerosol type at Karachi and Jaipur, contributing more than 50 % of all the aerosol types. OCE, on the other hand, contributes only about 12–15 % at all the stations except at Kanpur where its contribution is ∼38 %. The spectral dependence of AOD was relatively low for PD aerosol type, with the lowest AE values (<0.5); whereas, large spectral dependence in AOD was observed for the remaining aerosol types, with the highest AE values (>1.0). SSA was found to be the highest for OCE (>0.9) and the lowest for BCE (<0.9) type aerosols, with drastically different spectral variability. The direct aerosol radiative forcing at the surface and in the atmosphere was found to be the maximum at Lahore among all the four stations in the IGB. Article in Journal/Newspaper Aerosol Robotic Network Ministry of Earth Sciences, Government of India: Open Access Digital Repository
institution Open Polar
collection Ministry of Earth Sciences, Government of India: Open Access Digital Repository
op_collection_id ftmoes
language unknown
topic Meteorology and Climatology
spellingShingle Meteorology and Climatology
Tiwari, S
Srivastava, AK
Singh, AK
Singh, S
Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing
topic_facet Meteorology and Climatology
description The aerosols in the Indo-Gangetic Basin (IGB) are a mixture of sulfate, dust, black carbon, and other soluble and insoluble components. It is a challenge not only to identify these various aerosol types, but also to assess the optical and radiative implications of these components. In the present study, appropriate thresholds for fine-mode fraction and single-scattering albedo have been used to first identify the aerosol types over IGB. Four major aerosol types may be identified as polluted dust (PD), polluted continental (PC), black carbon-enriched (BCE), and organic carbon-enriched (OCE). Further, the implications of these different types of aerosols on optical properties and radiative forcing have been studied. The aerosol products derived from CIMEL sun/sky radiometer measurements, deployed under Aerosol Robotic Network program of NASA, USA were used from four different sites Karachi, Lahore, Jaipur, and Kanpur, spread over Pakistan and Northern India. PD is the most dominant aerosol type at Karachi and Jaipur, contributing more than 50 % of all the aerosol types. OCE, on the other hand, contributes only about 12–15 % at all the stations except at Kanpur where its contribution is ∼38 %. The spectral dependence of AOD was relatively low for PD aerosol type, with the lowest AE values (<0.5); whereas, large spectral dependence in AOD was observed for the remaining aerosol types, with the highest AE values (>1.0). SSA was found to be the highest for OCE (>0.9) and the lowest for BCE (<0.9) type aerosols, with drastically different spectral variability. The direct aerosol radiative forcing at the surface and in the atmosphere was found to be the maximum at Lahore among all the four stations in the IGB.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Tiwari, S
Srivastava, AK
Singh, AK
Singh, S
author_facet Tiwari, S
Srivastava, AK
Singh, AK
Singh, S
author_sort Tiwari, S
title Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing
title_short Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing
title_full Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing
title_fullStr Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing
title_full_unstemmed Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing
title_sort identification of aerosol types over indo-gangetic basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing
publisher Springer
publishDate 2015
url http://moeseprints.incois.gov.in/4224/
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11356-015-4495-6
genre Aerosol Robotic Network
genre_facet Aerosol Robotic Network
op_relation Tiwari, S and Srivastava, AK and Singh, AK and Singh, S (2015) Identification of aerosol types over Indo-Gangetic Basin: implications to optical properties and associated radiative forcing. Environmental Science and Pollution Research, 22. pp. 12246-12260.
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