Anthropogenic aerosol emissions and rainfall decline in South-West Australia - accompanying model results in NetCDF format


Autoria(s): Heinzeller, Dominikus; Junkermann, Wolfgang; Kunstmann, Harald
Cobertura

LATITUDE: -33.000000 * LONGITUDE: 118.000000

Data(s)

25/04/2016

Resumo

It is commonly understood that the observed decline in precipitation in South-West Australia during the 20th century is caused by anthropogenic factors. Candidates therefore are changes to large-scale atmospheric circulations due to global warming, extensive deforestation and anthropogenic aerosol emissions - all of which are effective on different spatial and temporal scales. This contribution focusses on the role of rapidly rising aerosol emissions from anthropogenic sources in South-West Australia around 1970. An analysis of historical longterm rainfall data of the Bureau of Meteorology shows that South-West Australia as a whole experienced a gradual decline in precipitation over the 20th century. However, on smaller scales and for the particular example of the Perth catchment area, a sudden drop in precipitation around 1970 is apparent. Modelling experiments at a convection-resolving resolution of 3.3km using the Weather and Research Forecasting (WRF) model version 3.6.1 with the aerosol-aware Thompson-Eidhammer microphysics scheme are conducted for the period 1970-1974. A comparison of four runs with different prescribed aerosol emissions and without aerosol effects demonstrates that tripling the pre-1960s atmospheric CCN and IN concentrations can suppress precipitation by 2-9%, depending on the area and the season. This suggests that a combination of all three processes is required to account for the gradual decline in rainfall seen for greater South-West Australia and for the sudden drop observed in areas along the West Coast in the 1970s: changing atmospheric circulations, deforestation and anthropogenic aerosol emissions.

Formato

application/zip, 1209.0 MBytes

Identificador

https://doi.pangaea.de/10.1594/PANGAEA.859952

doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.859952

Idioma(s)

en

Publicador

PANGAEA

Relação

Documentation of files (URI: hdl:10013/epic.47763.d001)

Direitos

CC-BY-SA: Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported

Access constraints: unrestricted

Fonte

Supplement to: Heinzeller, Dominikus; Junkermann, Wolfgang; Kunstmann, Harald (2016): Anthropogenic aerosol emissions and rainfall decline in South-West Australia: coincidence or causality? Journal of Climate, online first, doi:10.1175/JCLI-D-16-0082.1

Palavras-Chave #australia_sw; South Australia; South-West Australia
Tipo

Dataset