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NHM-Chem, the Japan Meteorological Agency's Regional Meteorology - Chemistry Model: Model Evaluations toward the Consistent Predictions of the Chemical, Physical, and Optical Properties of Aerosols.

Authors :
Mizuo KAJINO
Makoto DEUSHI
Tsuyoshi Thomas SEKIYAMA
Naga OSHIMA
Keiya YUMIMOTO
Taichu Yasumichi TANAKA
CHING, Joseph
Akihiro HASHIMOTO
Tetsuya YAMAMOTO
Masaaki IKEGAMI
Akane KAMADA
Makoto MIYASHITA
Yayoi INOMATA
Shin-ichiro SHIMA
Akinori TAKAMI
Atsushi SHIMIZU
Shiro HATAKEYAMA
Yasuhiro SADANAGA
Hitoshi IRIE
Kouji ADACHI
Source :
Journal of the Meteorological Society of Japan; Apr2019, Vol. 97 Issue 2, p337-374, 38p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The model performance of a regional-scale meteorology-chemistry model (NHM-Chem) has been evaluated for the consistent predictions of the chemical, physical, and optical properties of aerosols. These properties are essentially important for the accurate assessment of air quality and health hazards, contamination of land and ocean ecosystems, and regional climate changes due to aerosol-cloud-radiation interaction processes. Currently, three optional methods are available: the five-category non-equilibrium method, the three-category non-equilibrium method, and the bulk equilibrium method. These three methods are suitable for the predictions of regional climate, air quality, and operational forecasts, respectively. In this paper, the simulated aerosol chemical, physical, and optical properties and their consistency were evaluated using various observation data in East Asia. The simulated mass, size, and deposition of SO<subscript>4</subscript><superscript>2-</superscript> and NH<superscript>4+</superscript> agreed well with the observations, whereas those of NO<subscript>3</subscript><superscript>-</superscript>, sea salt, and dust needed improvement. The simulated surface mass concentration (PM10 and PM2.5) and spherical extinction coefficient agreed well with the observations. The simulated aerosol optical thickness (AOT) and dust extinction coefficient were significantly underestimated. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00261165
Volume :
97
Issue :
2
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of the Meteorological Society of Japan
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135788753
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2151/jmsj.2019-020