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Science 11 January 1974:
Vol. 183. no. 4120, pp. 75 - 77
DOI: 10.1126/science.183.4120.75

Articles

Aerosols and Climate

Petr Chyacutelek 1 and James A. Coakley Jr. 1

1 Advanced Study Program, National Centter for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado 80302

To determine the effects of atmospheric aerosols on the radiative heating of the earth-atmosphere system, the radiative transfer equation is solved analytically in the two-stream approximation. It is found that the sign of the heating is independent of optical thickness of an aerosol layer and the amount of heating approaches a finite limit with increasing thickness of a layer. Limitations of the two-stream approximation are discussed.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Dry climates past and present.
R. G. Barry and R.G. Barry (1978)
Progress in Physical Geography 2, 116-126
   PDF »
Short-term climatic fluctuations.
R. G. Barry (1977)
Progress in Physical Geography 1, 114-125
   PDF »
Aerosols in the Atmosphere: Calculation of the Critical Absorption/Backscatter Ratio.
R. A. Reck (1974)
Science 186, 1034-1036
   Abstract »    PDF »
Aerosol and Climate: Some Further Considerations.
B. C. Weare, R. L. Temkin, and F. M. Snell (1974)
Science 186, 827-828
   Abstract »    PDF »



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