Estimating the impact of a 2017 smoke plume on surface climate over
northern Canada with a climate model, satellite retrievals, and weather
forecasts
- Robert D. Field,
- ming luo,
- Susanne E. Bauer,
- Jonathan Edward Hickman,
- Gregory Elsaesser,
- Keren Mezuman,
- Marcus van-Lier Walqui,
- Kostas Tsigaridis,
- Jingbo Wu
ming luo
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology
Author ProfileSusanne E. Bauer
NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, New York, NY, USA
Author ProfileJonathan Edward Hickman
Center for Climate Systems Research, Columbia University, and NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
Author ProfileMarcus van-Lier Walqui
NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies and Center for Climate Systems Research, Columbia University
Author ProfileKostas Tsigaridis
Center for Climate Systems Research, Columbia University, and NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
Author ProfileAbstract
In August 2017, a smoke plume from wildfires in British Columbia and the
Northwest Territories recirculated and persisted over northern Canada
for over two weeks. We compared a full-factorial set of NASA Goddard
Institute for Space Studies ModelE simulations of the plume to satellite
retrievals of aerosol optical depth and carbon monoxide, finding that
ModelE performance was dependent on the model configuration, and more so
on the choice of injection height approach, aerosol scheme and biomass
burning emissions estimates than to the choice of horizontal winds for
nudging. In particular, ModelE simulations with free-tropospheric smoke
injection, a mass-based aerosol scheme and high fire NOx emissions led
to unrealistically high aerosol optical depth. Using paired simulations
with fire emissions excluded, we estimated that for 16 days over an 850
000 km2 region, the smoke decreased planetary boundary layer heights by
between 253 m and 547 m, decreased downward shortwave radiation by
between 52 Wm-2 and 172 Wm-2, and decreased surface temperature by
between 1.5 oC and 4.9 oC, the latter spanning an independent estimate
from operational weather forecasts of a 3.7 oC cooling. The strongest
surface climate effects were for ModelE configurations with more
detailed aerosol microphysics that led to a stronger first indirect
effect.08 Jun 2023Submitted to ESS Open Archive 08 Jun 2023Published in ESS Open Archive