Abstract
Deliberately blocking out a small portion of the incoming solar
radiation would cool the climate. One such approach would be injecting
SO$_2$ into the stratosphere, which would produce sulfate aerosols
that would remain in the atmosphere for 1–3 years, reflecting part of
the incoming shortwave radiation. This would not affect the climate the
same way as increased greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations, leading to
residual differences when a GHG increase is offset by stratospheric
sulfate geoengineering. Many climate model simulations of geoengineering
have used a uniform reduction of the incoming solar radiation as a proxy
for stratospheric aerosols, both because many models are not designed to
adequately capture relevant stratospheric aerosol processes, and because
a solar reduction has often been assumed to capture the most important
differences between how stratospheric aerosols and GHG would affect the
climate. Here we show that dimming the sun does not produce the same
surface climate effects as simulating aerosols in the stratosphere. By
more closely matching the spatial pattern of solar reduction to that of
the aerosols, some improvements in this idealized representation are
possible, with further improvements if the stratospheric heating
produced by the aerosols is included. This is relevant both for our
understanding of the physical mechanisms driving the changes observed in
stratospheric sulfate geoengineering simulations, and in terms of the
relevance of impact assessments that use a uniform solar dimming.