Effects of Biomass Burning on Climate, Accounting for Heat and Moisture Fluxes, Black and Brown Carbon, and Cloud Absorption Effects. Jacobson, M. Z. 119(14):8980–9002.
Effects of Biomass Burning on Climate, Accounting for Heat and Moisture Fluxes, Black and Brown Carbon, and Cloud Absorption Effects [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
This paper examines the effects on climate and air pollution of open biomass burning (BB) when heat and moisture fluxes, gases and aerosols (including black and brown carbon, tar balls, and reflective particles), cloud absorption effects (CAEs) I and II, and aerosol semidirect and indirect effects on clouds are treated. It also examines the climate impacts of most anthropogenic heat and moisture fluxes (AHFs and AMFs). Transient 20\,year simulations indicate BB may cause a net global warming of ̃0.4 K because CAE I (̃32\,% of BB warming), CAE II, semidirect effects, AHFs (̃7%), AMFs, and aerosol absorption outweigh direct aerosol cooling and indirect effects, contrary to previous BB studies that did not treat CAEs, AHFs, AMFs, or brown carbon. Some BB warming can be understood in terms of the anticorrelation between instantaneous direct radiative forcing (DRF) changes and surface temperature changes in clouds containing absorbing aerosols. BB may cause ̃250,000 (73,000-435,000) premature mortalities/yr, with $>$90\,% from particles. AHFs from all sources and AMFs\,+\,AHFs from power plants and electricity use each may cause a statistically significant +0.03 K global warming. Solar plus thermal-IR DRFs were +0.033 (+0.027) W/m2 for all AHFs globally without (with) evaporating cooling water, +0.009 W/m2 for AMFs globally, +0.52 W/m2 (94.3\,% solar) for all-source BC outside of clouds plus interstitially between cloud drops at the cloud relative humidity, and +0.06 W/m2 (99.7\,% solar) for BC inclusions in cloud hydrometeor particles. Modeled post-1850 biomass, biofuel, and fossil fuel burning, AHFs, AMFs, and urban surfaces accounted for most observed global warming.
@article{jacobsonEffectsBiomassBurning2014,
  title = {Effects of Biomass Burning on Climate, Accounting for Heat and Moisture Fluxes, Black and Brown Carbon, and Cloud Absorption Effects},
  author = {Jacobson, Mark Z.},
  date = {2014-07},
  journaltitle = {Journal of Geophysical Research, Atmospheres},
  volume = {119},
  pages = {8980--9002},
  issn = {2169-8996},
  doi = {10.1002/2014jd021861},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1002/2014jd021861},
  abstract = {This paper examines the effects on climate and air pollution of open biomass burning (BB) when heat and moisture fluxes, gases and aerosols (including black and brown carbon, tar balls, and reflective particles), cloud absorption effects (CAEs) I and II, and aerosol semidirect and indirect effects on clouds are treated. It also examines the climate impacts of most anthropogenic heat and moisture fluxes (AHFs and AMFs). Transient 20\,year simulations indicate BB may cause a net global warming of ̃0.4 K because CAE I (̃32\,\% of BB warming), CAE II, semidirect effects, AHFs (̃7\%), AMFs, and aerosol absorption outweigh direct aerosol cooling and indirect effects, contrary to previous BB studies that did not treat CAEs, AHFs, AMFs, or brown carbon. Some BB warming can be understood in terms of the anticorrelation between instantaneous direct radiative forcing (DRF) changes and surface temperature changes in clouds containing absorbing aerosols. BB may cause ̃250,000 (73,000-435,000) premature mortalities/yr, with {$>$}90\,\% from particles. AHFs from all sources and AMFs\,+\,AHFs from power plants and electricity use each may cause a statistically significant +0.03 K global warming. Solar plus thermal-IR DRFs were +0.033 (+0.027) W/m2 for all AHFs globally without (with) evaporating cooling water, +0.009 W/m2 for AMFs globally, +0.52 W/m2 (94.3\,\% solar) for all-source BC outside of clouds plus interstitially between cloud drops at the cloud relative humidity, and +0.06 W/m2 (99.7\,\% solar) for BC inclusions in cloud hydrometeor particles. Modeled post-1850 biomass, biofuel, and fossil fuel burning, AHFs, AMFs, and urban surfaces accounted for most observed global warming.},
  keywords = {*imported-from-citeulike-INRMM,~INRMM-MiD:c-13248803,atmosphere,biomass,biomass-burning,carbon-emissions,climate,cloudiness,wildfires},
  number = {14}
}

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