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Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols Clouds Radiative Forcing of Climate Biological Effects of UV Radiation Sasha Madronich National Center for Atmospheric Research Boulder Colorado USA sasha@u car.edu Boulder, 8 February 2011

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Page 1: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species

Photolysis ReactionsMolecular Spectra and Quantum YieldsSolar Radiation

Fundamentals of Radiative TransferAerosolsClouds

Radiative Forcing of ClimateBiological Effects of UV Radiation

Sasha MadronichNational Center for Atmospheric ResearchBoulder Colorado [email protected], 8 February 2011

Page 2: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Energetics of Oxygen in the Atmosphere

DHf (298K) kcal mol-1

Excited atoms O*(1D) 104.9

Ground state atoms O (3P) 59.6

Ozone O3 34.1

Normal molecules O2 0

2

Increasingstability

Page 3: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Atmospheric OxygenThermodynamic vs. Actual

1E-110

1E-100

1E-90

1E-80

1E-70

1E-60

1E-50

1E-40

1E-30

1E-20

1E-10

1

200 220 240 260 280 300

Temperature, K

Co

nc

en

tra

tio

n, a

tm. O2 (=0.21)

thermodyn. O3

thermodyn. O

thermodyn. O*

observed O3

inferred O

inferred O*

3

O3

O

O*

Page 4: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Photochemistry

Thermodynamics alone cannot explain atmospheric amounts of O3, O, O*

Need – energy input, e.g.

O2 + hn O + O (l < 240 nm)

– chemical reactions, e.g. O + O2 (+ M) O3 (+ M)

= Photochemistry

4

Page 5: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Some Important Photolysis Reactions

O2 + hn (l < 240 nm) O + O source of O3 in stratosphere

O3 + hn (l < 340 nm) O2 + O(1D) source of OH in troposphere

NO2 + hn (l < 420 nm) NO + O(3P) source of O3 in troposphere

CH2O + hn (l < 330 nm) H + HCO source of HOx, everywhere

H2O2 + hn (l < 360 nm) OH + OH source of OH in remote atm.

HONO + hn (l < 400 nm) OH + NO source of radicals in urban atm.

5

Page 6: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Quantifying Photolysis Processes

6

Photolysis reaction: AB + hn A + B

Photolysis frequency (s-1) J = l F(l) ( ) ( )s l f l dl

(other names: photo-dissociation rate coefficient, J-value)

Photolysis rates:

Page 7: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

CALCULATION OF PHOTOLYSIS COEFFICIENTS

J (s-1) = l F(l) ( ) ( )s l f l dl

F(l) = spectral actinic flux, quanta cm-2 s-1 nm-1

probability of photon near molecule.

( ) = s l absorption cross section, cm2 molec-1

probability that photon is absorbed.

( ) = f l photodissociation quantum yield, molec quanta-1

probability that absorbed photon causes dissociation.

Page 8: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Measurement of Absorption Cross Section s(l)

8

Pressuregage

Pump forclean out

Gas in

Gas supply

Transmittance = I / Io = exp(-s n L)

s = -1/(nL) ln( I/Io )

Easy: measure pressure (n = P/RT), and relative change in light: I/Io

Light detector

Lamp

Prism

L

Absorption cell

Page 9: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

O2 Absorption Cross Section

9

Page 10: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

O3 Absorption Cross Section

10

Page 11: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

H2O2 Absorption Cross Section

11

Page 12: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

NO2 Absorption Cross Section

12

Page 13: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

CH2O Absorption Cross Section

13

Page 14: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Measurement of Quantum Yields f(l)

14

L

Pressuregage

Pump forclean out

Gas in

Gas supply

Light detector

Transmittance = I / Io = exp(-s n L)

Quantum Yield = number of breaks per photon absorbedf = Dn / DI

Difficult: must measure absolute change in n (products) and I (photons absorbed)

Lamp

Prism

Absorption cell

Page 15: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Measured Quantum Yields

15

Page 16: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Compilations of Cross Sections & Quantum Yields

16

http://www.atmosphere.mpg.de/enid/2295

http://jpldataeval.jpl.nasa.gov/

Page 17: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

17

Spectral Range ForTropospheric Photochemistry

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1

280 300 320 340 360 380 400 420

Wavelength, nm

dJ

/dl

(re

l)

O3->O2+O1D

NO2->NO+O

H2O2->2OH

HONO->HO+NO

CH2O->H+HCO

surface, overhead sun

Page 18: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

18

Solar Spectrum

UNEP, 2002

O2 and O3 absorball UV-C (l<280 nm)before it reaches the troposphere

Page 19: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

19

Typical Vertical Optical Depths, t

0.01

0.1

1

10

100

280 300 320 340 360 380 400 420

Wavelength, nm

Op

tic

al d

ep

th O3 (300 DU)

Rayleigh

Aerosol (25 km)

Cloud (32)

Direct transmission = exp(-t)Diffuse transmission can be much larger

Page 20: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

DIFFUSE LIGHT - CLEAN SKIES, SEA LEVEL

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

0 20 40 60 80 100

Solar zenith angle, deg.

Diff

use

frac

tion 320 nm

550 nm

Irradiance Actinic flux

Page 21: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

21

RADIATIVE TRANSFER CONCEPTS

Page 22: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

22

RADIATIVE TRANSFER THEORY…is hard

Page 23: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

23

Spectral Radiance, I

I( , ,l q f) = N(hc/l) / (dt dA dw dl) units: J s-1 m-2 sr-1 nm-1

(old name = spectral Intensity)

Page 24: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

INTEGRALS OVER ANGULAR INCIDENCE

24

2

0

2

0

ddsincos),(IE

0

2

0

ddsin),(IF

Watts m-2 Watts m-2 or quanta s-1 cm-2

Page 25: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Absorption and Scattering

• Absorption – inelastic, loss of radiant energy:

• Scattering – elastic, radiant energy is conserved, direction changes:

25

Page 26: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

26

Beer-Lambert Law

Volume of box = V = Area x Thickness = A dz

Molecules (or particles):each has cross sectional area stotal number = N = n Vtotal area of molecules = s N = s n A dz

Fraction of light lost = fraction of area shaded by molecules = s n A dz / A = s n dz

Fraction of light surviving box:I(z+dz)/I(z) = 1 - s n dz

or [I(z+dz) - I(z)] / dz = - s n I(z)

or (lim dz 0)(differential form) dI/dz = - s n I(integral form) I(z2) = I(z1) exp [- s n (z2-z1)]

z z+dz

I(z) I(z+dz)

Page 27: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

27

Definition of Optical Depth

Beer-Lambert Law: I(z2) = I(z1) exp [- s n (z2-z1)]

Optical depth: t = s n (z2-z1)

If s and/or n depend on z, then

2

1

d)()(z

z

zznz

In monochromatic radiative transfer, t is often used as the spatial coordinate (instead of z)

Page 28: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

28

SCATTERING PHASE FUNCTIONS

P( , q f; q’, f’)

Page 29: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

29

The Radiative Transfer Equation

cos dI (, , )

d I ( , , )

o

4 F e

/ cos o P( , ;o,

o)

o

4I( , ' , ' )P (, ; ' , ' )1

10

2 d cos ' d '

Propagation derivative Beer-Lambert attenuation

Scattering fromdirect solar beam

Scattering from diffuse light(multiple scattering)

Page 30: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

30

NUMERICAL SOLUTIONS TO RADIATIVE TRANSFER EQUATION

• Discrete ordinates n-streams (n = even), angular distribution exact as n but speed 1/n2

• Two-stream family delta-Eddington, many others very fast but not exact

• Monte Carlo slow, but ideal for 3D problems

• Others matrix operator, Feautrier, adding-doubling,

successive orders, etc.

Page 31: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

31

Multiple Atmospheric LayersEach Assumed to be Homogeneous

Optical depth, DtSingle scattering albedo, wo = scatt./(scatt.+abs.)Asymmetry factor, g: forward fraction, f ~ (1+g)/2

Must specify three optical properties:

Page 32: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

32

For each layer, must specify Dt, wo, g:

1. Vertical optical depth, Dt(l, z) = s(l, z) n(z) Dz

for molecules: Dt(l, z) ~ 0 - 30Rayleigh scatt. ~ 0.1 - 1.0 ~ l-4

O3 absorption ~ 0 - 30

for aerosols: 0.01 - 5.0 Dt(l, z) ~ l-a

for clouds: 1-1000 a ~ 0cirrus ~ 1-5cumulonimbus ~ > 100

Page 33: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

33

For each layer, must specify Dt, wo, g:

2. Single scattering albedo, wo(l, z) = scatt./(scatt.+abs.)

range 0 - 1limits: pure scattering = 1.0

pure absorption = 0.0

for molecules, strongly l-dependent, depending onabsorber amount, esp. O3

for aerosols: sulfate ~ 0.99soot, organics ~ 0.8 or less, not well known but probably higher

at shorter l, esp. in UV

for clouds: typically 0.9999 or larger (vis and UV)

Page 34: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

34

For each layer, must specify Dt, wo, g:

3. Asymmetry factor, g(l, z) = first moment of phase function

range -1 to + 1pure back-scattering = -1isotropic or Rayleigh = 0pure forward scattering = +1

strongly dependent on particle sizefor aerosols:, typically 0.5-0.7for clouds, typically 0.7-0.9

Mie theory for spherical particles: can compute Dt, wo, g from knowledge of l, particle radius and complex index of refraction

1

1

)d(coscos)(2

1Pg

Page 35: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

SIMPLE2-STREAMMETHOD:3 Equations for each layer

Page 36: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

AEROSOLS

36

Page 37: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

37

Many different types of aerosols

• Size distributions• Composition (size-dependent)

Need to determine aerosol optical properties:

t(l) = optical depth

wo = single scattering albedoP(Q) = phase function or g = asymmetry factor

Page 38: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

38

Mie Scattering Theory

For spherical particles, given:

Complex index of refraction: n = m + ikSize parameter: a = 2pr / l

Can compute:

Extinction efficiency Qe(a, n) x pr2

Scattering efficiency Qs(a, n) x pr2

Phase function P(Q, a, n) or asymmetry factor g(a, n)

Page 39: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

39

Extinction Efficiency, Qext

10 100 1000 100000

1

2

3

4

5

300 nm

400 nm

Radius, nm

Qe

xt

n = 1.55 + 0.01i

Page 40: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

40

Phase function or Asymmetry factor, g

Asymmetry factor, g n = 1.5 + 0.01 i

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

200 300 400 500 600 700

Wavelength, nm

g

100 nm

300 nm

1000 nm

Page 41: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

41

Single Scattering Albedo = Qscatt/Qext

Single Scattering Albedo, o

n = 1.5 + 0.01 i

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

1.2

200 300 400 500 600 700

Wavelength, nm

o

100 nm

300 nm

1000 nm

Page 42: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

42

Aerosol size distributions

Page 43: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

43

Optical properties of aerosol ensembles

Total extinction coefficient =

Total scattering coefficient =

Average single scattering albedo =

Average asymmetry factor =

rrnrQrK ss d)(),()(0

2 ll

)(/)()( lll eso KK

0

2

0

2

d)(),(

d)(),(),(

)(

rrnrQr

rrnrQrrg

g

s

s

l

lll

rrnrQrK ee d)(),()(0

2 ll

Page 44: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

UV Actinic Flux Reduction Slower Photochemistry

44Madronich, Shetter, Halls, Lefer, AGU’07

300 320 340 360 380 4000

100000000000000

200000000000000

300000000000000

obs

tuv-clean

tuv-polluted

Wavelength, nm

Qu

anta

cm

-2 s

-1 n

m-1

18 March 16:55 LTsolar zenith angle = 65o

Mexico City

Page 45: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Aerosol EffectsNO2 Photolysis Frequency

19N, April, noon, AOD = 1 at 380 nm

0

0.5

1

1.5

2

5.0E-03 1.0E-02 1.5E-02

JNO2, s-1

z, k

m

clean

purelyscattering

moderately absorbing(o=0.8)

Castro et al. 2001

Page 46: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

CLOUDS

46

Page 47: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

UNIFORM CLOUD LAYER

• Above cloud: - high radiation because of reflection

• Below cloud: - lower radiation because of attenuation by cloud

• Inside cloud: - complicated behavior– Top half: very high values (for high sun)– Bottom half: lower values

47

Page 48: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

48

EFFECT OF UNIFORM CLOUDS ON ACTINIC FLUX

340 nm, sza = 0 deg., cloud between 4 and 6 km

02468

10

0.E+00 4.E+14 8.E+14

Actinic flux, quanta cm-2 s-1

Alt

itu

de,

km

od = 100

od = 10

od = 0

Page 49: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

49

INSIDE CLOUDS:Photon Path Enhancements

Cumulonimbus, od=400

Mayer et al., 1998

Page 50: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

50

Broken Clouds

Page 51: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

51

SPECTRAL EFFECTS OF PARTIAL CLOUD COVER

Crafword et al., 2003

Page 52: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

PARTIAL CLOUD COVERBiomodal distributions

Crawford et al., 2003

Page 53: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

53

Independent Pixel Approximation

Cloud free:• So = direct sun• Do = diffuse light from sky• Go = total = So + Do

Completely covered by clouds:• S1 = direct sun (probably very small)• D1 = diffuse light from base of cloud• G1 = total = S1 + D1

Mix: Clouds cover a fraction c of the sky• If sun is not blocked: GNB = So + cD1 + (1-c)Do • If sun is blocked: GB = S1 + cD1 + (1-c)Do

Page 54: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

54

Photochemistry Inside Liquid Particles

clouds

aerosol

Mayer and Madronich, 2004

Page 55: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Radiative Forcing of

Climate

55

Page 56: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Shortwave and Longwave Radiation

56

Page 57: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Energy Balance

57

Page 58: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Infrared Absorbers

58

Page 59: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Very Structured Spectra

59

Page 60: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Radiative Forcing

IPCC, 2007

Incoming solar ~340 W m-2

1827 – Fourier recognizes atmospheric heat trapping

1860 – Tyndall measures infrared spectra

1896 – Arrhenius estimates doubling of CO2

would increase global temperatures by 5-6 oC

Changes since 1750:long-lived gases ~ 3 W m-2

ozone ~ 0.4 W m-2

aerosols and clouds ~ -1 W m-2

Page 61: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Some Climate Model Problems

11 models compared

All predict 20th century climate

well, but for different reasons

Trade off between

- aerosol forcing

- climate sensitivity

Climate sensitivity = DT for doubling of CO2

61Kiehl, 2007

Page 62: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Biological Effectsof

Ultraviolet Radiation

62

Page 63: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

63

Non-melanoma Skin Cancers

Page 64: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

64

Moles and Melanoma

Page 65: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

65

Melanoma Warning SignsAsymmetry, Border, Color, Diameter (ABCD)

Page 66: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

66

Damage to Eyes

Page 67: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

67

ACTION SPECTRUM DETERMINATION

Page 68: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

68

Ocular damage action spectra (normalized at 300 nm)

0.0001

0.001

0.01

0.1

1

10

100

280 300 320 340 360 380

Wavelength, nm

Se

ns

itiv

ity

cataract pig (Oriowo)

cataract rat (Merriam)

cataract rabbit (Pitts)

conjunctiva human (Pitts)

cornea rabbit (Pitts)

cornea primate (Pitts)

cornea human (Pitts)

uvitis rabbit (Pitts)

ave-Pitts only

ave-all ocular

erythema human (CIE)

Page 69: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

69

SPECTRALLY INTEGRATED RADIATION

Radiometry

Signal (W m-2) = l E(l) R(l) dl

Biological effects

Dose rate (W m-2) = l E(l) B(l) dl

Photo-dissociation of atmospheric chemicals

Photolysis frequency (s-1) = l F(l) s(l) f(l) dl

Page 70: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

70

Changes in surface irradiance, for 1% O3 change

Near 300 DU

Solid: Absolute

(mW m-2 nm-1)

Dotted: Relative

(percent)

Heavy: sza = 0o

Light: sza = 70o

Page 71: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Observed dependenceof UV on O3 changes (clear sky)

Madronich et al. 1998

For erythemal (sunburning) radiation

Page 72: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

72

Global Climatology of UVR from Satellites

Total Ozone Mapping Spectrometer (TOMS):– Nimbus 7 (1 Nov 1978 – 31 Dec 1992)– Meteor 3 (22 Aug 1991 – 11 Dec 1994)– Earth Probe (2 Jul 1996 – 30 Jun 2000)

Data (Level 3/Version 7):– O3 by UV-B wavelength pairs– Cloud reflectivity at 380 nm– 1.25o lon x 1.00o lat

Model:– TUV look up tables for erythemal irradiance, as functions of

sza, O3, surface elevation– Calculate for each location, 15 min of each half day, each

month, each year

Page 73: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

UVERY climatology, 1979 to 2000 - Clear skies

Page 74: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

UVERY climatology, 1979 to 2000 - All skies

Page 75: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

UVERY change, 1980’s to 1990’sClear sky (ozone changes only)

Page 76: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

Cloud factor % changes, 1980’s to 1990’s

Page 77: Photochemistry of Atmospheric Species Photolysis Reactions Molecular Spectra and Quantum Yields Solar Radiation Fundamentals of Radiative Transfer Aerosols

UVERY % change, 1980’s to 1990’sAll sky conditions (ozone and cloud changes)