Bibcode
Sanchez-Lorenzo, A.; Sanroma, E.; Pallé, E.
Bibliographical reference
Environmental Research Letters, Volume 5, Issue 2, pp. 024006 (2010).
Advertised on:
4
2010
Citations
16
Refereed citations
15
Description
Over the past few years, ground- and space-based atmospheric
measurements have revealed a large inter-decadal variability in the
amount of radiation reaching the Earth's surface, also known as global
dimming and brightening. However, the underlying physical causes of
these changes remain unexplained. Clouds and aerosols, or their
interactions, could both be responsible for the insolation changes,
which in turn may impact the radiative balance of the planet. Here,
making use of the special topology and clean environment of the Canary
Islands, we compare trends in sunshine duration and temperature series,
as a function of altitude. The temperature dataset is constituted by a
series of mean, minimum and maximum temperatures, and daily temperature
ranges. We find that the insolation and temperature trends are identical
at sea level and at more than 2 km height, but the changes in diurnal
temperature range are not, suggesting a possible urban heat effect at
the sea level location, as well as a possible different influence of
clouds and/or aerosols at different altitudes. We also find that during
the summer, especially at the high altitude site, there is a clear
correspondence between daytime insolation and nighttime cloud-free
atmospheric extinction measurements. This suggests that atmospheric
aerosol concentrations are the major contributor to the variations in
the flux of solar radiation reaching the ground at high altitude sites
over the Canary Islands.