Advances in Remote Sensing of Aerosol Optical Properties and the Effects on Radiation
A special issue of Remote Sensing (ISSN 2072-4292). This special issue belongs to the section "Urban Remote Sensing".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: 30 January 2025 | Viewed by 1385
Special Issue Editors
Interests: atmospheric aerosols; aerosol science
Interests: aerosol and cloud physics; solar radiation; atmospheric radiative transfer; atmospheric remote sensing
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: aerosol; solar radiation; clouds; ultraviolet irradiance
Interests: aerosol optical and microphysical properties; atmospheric boundary layer; bioaerosols research based on remote sensing; cloud and aerosol–cloud interaction studies by remote sensing; quality control procedures for remote sensing measurements
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
The potential impacts of aerosol radiative force on the climate have generated considerable recent interest. In general, atmospheric aerosols affect the climate in two ways: through the so-called direct effect, which is primarily human activity due to scatter incoming solar radiation, as a few aerosol types can absorb solar radiation, and through the indirect effect that plays a role in cloud formation because aerosols may serve as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) and ice nuclei (IN), affecting the properties of clouds. Thus, when evaluating the effects of aerosols on a climate system, the aerosol properties have to be strongly taken into account. Uncertainties in the understanding of their both effects (direct and indirect) limit our knowledge about climate change. In fact, aerosol radiative effects and their relationship to climate change remain inaccurate (IPCC 2013), and this uncertainty is more considerable in some ranges of the solar spectrum, for example, in the visible range. Solar radiation modification approaches, if implemented, introduce a widespread range of new risks to people and ecosystems, and these risks are not well understood (IPCC 2023). Thus, it is very important to publish research on how aerosols affect solar radiation in different wavelength ranges.
Assessing the radiative effects of aerosols at various sites worldwide is crucial to contribute to the knowledge about climate change. This Special Issue aims to publish studies focused on the interactions between aerosols and radiation in different spectral ranges. Thus, aerosol radiative forcing (ARF) and aerosol forcing efficiency (AFE) are widely used to quantify and compare the potential impact that aerosols have on the climate, since ARF is defined as a change in the Earth's radiation balance due to a perturbation of anthropogenic or natural origin. To achieve this main goal, advancing our knowledge on aerosol properties is very important in order to quantify these radiative balance variations due to aerosol changes. Using remote sensing to obtain aerosol properties contributes to decreasing the uncertainties about the knowledge of aerosols and consequently to propose strategies to limit climate change.
Research papers:
- Characterizing aerosol properties using solar irradiance measurements;
- Reconstruction of long-term aerosol properties series with solar radiation records;
- Remote sensing of aerosol properties using data lidar;
- Estimation of aerosol radiative forcing for photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) and other ranges of wavelengths;
- Determination of aerosol optical properties by a sky camera;
- Global and diffuse solar irradiance during dust episodes;
- Trends in solar radiation/aerosols interaction;
- Remote sensing of aerosols and radiation from satellites;
- Monitoring of aerosols and surface insolation;
- Aerosol effects on solar irradiance under pollution episodes;
- Radiative effects of aerosols for all sky conditions;
- Aerosol radiative forcing through radiative transfer calculations;
- Comparisons of aerosol radiative forcing using measurements and radiative transfer models.
Dr. Inmaculada Foyo-Moreno
Prof. Dr. Maria João Costa
Dr. Maria Pilar Utrillas
Prof. Dr. Juan Luis Guerrero Rascado
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- remote sensing
- interaction aerosol radiation
- aerosol radiative forcing
- aerosol properties
- solar radiation
- atmospheric radiative transfer
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