The Climate Response to Stratospheric Aerosol Geoengineering Can Be Tailored Using Multiple Injection Locations

Abstract

By injecting different amounts of SO2 at multiple different latitudes, the spatial pattern of aerosol optical depth (AOD) can be partially controlled. This leads to the ability to influence the climate response to geoengineering with stratospheric aerosols, providing the potential for design. We use simulations from the fully coupled whole‐atmosphere chemistry climate model CESM1(WACCM) to demonstrate that by appropriately combining injection at just four different locations, 30°S, 15°S, 15°N, and 30°N, then three spatial degrees of freedom of AOD can be achieved: an approximately spatially uniform AOD distribution, the relative difference in AOD between Northern and Southern Hemispheres, and the relative AOD in high versus low latitudes. For forcing levels that yield 1–2°C cooling, the AOD and surface temperature response are sufficiently linear in this model so that the response to different combinations of injection at different latitudes can be estimated from single‐latitude injection simulations; nonlinearities associated with both aerosol growth and changes to stratospheric circulation will be increasingly important at higher forcing levels. Optimized injection at multiple locations is predicted to improve compensation of CO2‐forced climate change relative to a case using only equatorial aerosol injection (which overcools the tropics relative to high latitudes). The additional degrees of freedom can be used, for example, to balance the interhemispheric temperature gradient and the equator to pole temperature gradient in addition to the global mean temperature. Further research is needed to better quantify the impacts of these strategies on changes to long‐term temperature, precipitation, and other climate parameters.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Dec 07, 2017
Source ID
10.1002/2017jd026868

Entities

People

  • Ben Kravitz
  • Douglas G MacMartin
  • Francis Vitt
  • Jadwiga H. Richter
  • Jean-Francois Lamarque
  • Joseph Tribbia
  • Michael Mills
  • Simone Tilmes

Organizations

  • Battelle Memorial Institute
  • California Institute of Technology
  • Climate and Global Dynamics Laboratory
  • Cornell University
  • Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
  • National Center for Atmospheric Research
  • National Science Foundation
  • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science/Meteorology
  • Combustion and Flow Dynamics.
  • Optical Fiber Sensing and Electromagnetic Propagation.

Technology Areas

  • Space
  • Space - Spacecraft Maneuvers