Influences of the springtime northern Indian biomass burning over the central Himalayas

Rajesh Kumar, Manish Naja, S. K. Satheesh, N. Ojha, H. Joshi, T. Sarangi, P. Pant, U. C. Dumka, P. Hegde, S. Venkataramani

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Abstract

The influences of the springtime northern Indian biomass burning are shown for the first time over the central Himalayas by using three years (2007-2009) of surface and space based observations along with a radiative transfer model. Near-surface ozone, black carbon (BC), spectral aerosol optical depths (AODs) and the meteorological parameters are measured at a high altitude site Nainital (29.37N, 79.45E, 1958 m amsl) located in the central Himalayas. The satellite observations include the MODIS derived fire counts and AOD (0.55 m), and OMI derived tropospheric column NO2, ultraviolet aerosol index and single scattering albedo. MODIS fire counts and BC observations are used to identify the fire-impacted periods (372 h during 2007-2009) and hence the induced enhancements in surface BC, AOD (0.5 m) and ozone are estimated to be 1802 ng m-3 (∼145%), 0.3 (∼150%) and 19 ppbv (∼34%) respectively. Large enhancements (53-100%) are also seen in the satellite derived parameters over a 2° × 2° region around Nainital. The present analysis highlights the northern Indian biomass burning induced cooling at the surface (-27 W m-2) and top of the atmosphere (-8 W m-2) in the lesser polluted high altitude regions of the central Himalayas. This cooling leads to an additional atmospheric warming of 19 W m-2 and increases the lower atmospheric heating rate by 0.8 K day-1. These biomass burning induced changes over the central Himalayan atmosphere during spring may also lead to enhanced short-wave absorption above clouds and might have an impact on the monsoonal rainfall.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberD19302
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research
Volume116
Issue number19
DOIs
StatePublished - 2011

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