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Radiative Climate Forcing by the Mount Pinatubo Eruption
393
Citations
33
References
1993
Year
Volcanic Gas ChemistryVolcanologyEngineeringVolcanismMount Pinatubo EruptionMount PinatuboEarth ScienceGeophysicsVolcano MonitoringAtmospheric ScienceVolcanic ProcessRadiative Flux AnomaliesRadiation MeasurementCosmic RaySpace WeatherClimate DynamicsClimatologyVolcanic FumarolesLaharJune 1991
Radiative flux anomalies derived from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) spaceborne Earth Radiation Budget Experiment were used to determine the volcanic radiative forcing that followed the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in June 1991. They are the first unambiguous, direct measurements of large-scale volcanic forcing. The volcanic aerosols caused a strong cooling effect immediately; the amount of cooling increased through September 1991 as shortwave forcing increased relative to the longwave forcing. The primary effects of the aerosols were a direct increase in albedo over mostly clear areas and both direct and indirect increases in the albedo of cloudy areas.
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