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Aviation and the Global Atmosphere

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<strong>Aviation</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Global</strong> <strong>Atmosphere</strong><br />

<strong>Aviation</strong> <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> <strong>Global</strong> <strong>Atmosphere</strong><br />

Table of contents | Previous page | Next page<br />

6.3. Radiative Forcing from Aircraft-Induced Changes in Greenhouse Gases<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r reports in this collection<br />

This section presents RF calculations for perturbations to greenhouse gases attributable to aircraft. Greenhouse gases that have been identified as aircraft-perturbed<br />

are CO 2 , O3, CH4, <strong>and</strong> H2O. Each gas presents a special case in terms of predicting its perturbation or deriving radiative forcing. The RF calculations presented here<br />

are derived from radiative-balance <strong>and</strong> comprehensive climate models by subtracting net radiative flux (incoming solar minus outgoing terrestrial infrared) for a control<br />

run from that for a run that includes <strong>the</strong> specified perturbation. In general, <strong>the</strong>se calculations integrate over a full range of latitudinal <strong>and</strong> seasonal variations that are<br />

typical of <strong>the</strong> Earth's climate, consider <strong>the</strong> imbalance at <strong>the</strong> tropopause, <strong>and</strong> account for <strong>the</strong> adjustment of stratospheric temperatures. Important factors in deriving<br />

representative radiative forcing include realistic temperatures, water vapor, surface albedo, clouds, <strong>and</strong> tropopause. RF calculations represent <strong>the</strong> instantaneous<br />

imbalance in <strong>the</strong> troposphere-l<strong>and</strong>-ocean system, thus do not include responses that are considered part of <strong>the</strong> climate feedback system, such as changes to clouds<br />

<strong>and</strong> tropospheric water vapor.<br />

RF values depend on atmospheric composition as well as temperature, water vapor, <strong>and</strong> clouds because all of <strong>the</strong>se factors interact with <strong>the</strong> radiation field. For <strong>the</strong>se<br />

calculations, we have adopted <strong>the</strong> changing composition as specified in IS92a from IPCC (1995) <strong>and</strong> summarized in Table 6-2. This composition includes substantial<br />

increases in CO 2 <strong>and</strong> CH4 that alter <strong>the</strong> Earth's radiation spectrum, thus change <strong>the</strong> RF for a given unit increase of gas. Although we expect mean global warming of<br />

about 1 K by 2050, with concurrent changes in water vapor <strong>and</strong> possibly cloud cover, <strong>the</strong>re is no consensus in IPCC (1996) regarding what this future atmosphere<br />

would be. Thus, <strong>the</strong>se RF values for 2050 are not based on a future climate, <strong>and</strong> this discrepancy must add to <strong>the</strong> uncertainty of this assessment. However, all such<br />

potential, systematic errors apply equally to <strong>the</strong> baseline scenario IS92a, <strong>and</strong> <strong>the</strong> relative climatic impact of aircraft will have less uncertainty.<br />

Table of contents | Previous page | Next page<br />

O<strong>the</strong>r reports in this collection<br />

http://www.ipcc.ch/ipccreports/sres/aviation/072.htm08.05.2008 02:42:58<br />

IPCC Homepage

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