Date:    Fri, 4 Dec 1998 19:58:16 EST
From:    C 
Subject: GL:  NCAR News-Imported Pollution

----------------------------Original message----------------------------
1998-34
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: December 4, 1998

NCAR Team Tags "Imported" Pollutants over the
Pacific Northwest

Contact:
Anatta
UCAR Communications
Boulder, CO 80307-3000
Telephone: 303-497-8604
E-mail: anatta@ucar.edu


BOULDER--From 50% to 60% of sulfate-aerosol pollution over the Pacific
Northwest is coming from industrialized Asia, according to a model
developed by a team of researchers at the National Center for
Atmospheric Research (NCAR). While the total column of air contains
"imported" sulfate aerosols, near the surface most of the aerosols come
from North American sources. In contrast, sulfates in Europe are coming
primarily from European sources, both at the surface and higher in the
atmosphere. Jeffrey Kiehl, head of NCAR's Climate Modeling Section, will
present the group's findings December 7 at the American Geophysical
Union conference in San Francisco. Research funds came from the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration and the National Science
Foundation. NSF is NCAR's primary sponsor.

"It's widely recognized that sulfate aerosols are playing a major role
in the climate system," says Kiehl. The ability of these aerosols (tiny
particles of liquids and solids) to reflect the sun's radiation may be
one reason that increasing greenhouse gases have not warmed the earth as
much as some climate models have predicted. Sulfates also contribute to
local pollution and acid rain.

"One important way that sulfur moves in the atmosphere is through
transport by the earth's winds," Kiehl explains. But winds are not the
whole story. For the past three years, Kiehl and colleagues Mary Barth,
Philip Rasch, and Timothy Schneider have been developing an integrated
model of climate and sulfur chemistry. The model includes the emission
of natural and industrial sulfur into the earth's atmosphere. To model
how the sulfur gas changes into sulfate aerosol particles, they included
chemical processes and the chemical and physical effects of clouds,
including clouds' ability to remove sulfates from the atmosphere. They
also included the effect of the sulfate aerosols on the reflection of
sunlight to address the key question of sulfates' role in the climate
system. The researchers compared their model simulations of sulfur and
sulfate aerosols with real-world observations near the surface. More
comparisons with observations yet to be made far above the surface are
needed to confirm the model findings.

Fully integrating sulfur chemistry into the climate model allowed the
team to account for the effects of interacting winds, precipitation, and
clouds on that chemistry. This integrated modeling allowed them to
calculate the amount of sulfate aerosols formed or removed in any given
region. By tagging the sulfates in the climate simulations by source
region, the team could calculate the percent of sulfates transported
from one region to another. The source regions considered are North
America, Asia, and Europe, with the rest of the world grouped as the
fourth region.

NCAR is managed by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research,
a consortium of more than 60 universities offering Ph.D.s in atmospheric
and related sciences.

-The End-

Writer: Zhenya Gallon

Find this news release on the World Wide Web at
http://www.ucar.edu/publications/newsreleases/1998/sulfates.html

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