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Performance assessment for climate intervention (PACI): preliminary application to a stratospheric aerosol injection scenario

Frontiers in Environmental Science

Wheeler, Lauren B.; Zeitler, Todd Z.; Brunell, Sarah B.; Lien, Jessica; Shand, Lyndsay S.; Wagman, Benjamin M.; Roesler, Erika L.; Martinez, Carianne M.; Potter, Kevin M.

As the prospect of exceeding global temperature targets set forth in the Paris Agreement becomes more likely, methods of climate intervention are increasingly being explored. With this increased interest there is a need for an assessment process to understand the range of impacts across different scenarios against a set of performance goals in order to support policy decisions. The methodology and tools developed for Performance Assessment (PA) for nuclear waste repositories shares many similarities with the needs and requirements for a framework for climate intervention. Using PA, we outline and test an evaluation framework for climate intervention, called Performance Assessment for Climate Intervention (PACI) with a focus on Stratospheric Aerosol Injection (SAI). We define a set of key technical components for the example PACI framework which include identifying performance goals, the extent of the system, and identifying which features, events, and processes are relevant and impactful to calculating model output for the system given the performance goals. Having identified a set of performance goals, the performance of the system, including uncertainty, can then be evaluated against these goals. Using the Geoengineering Large Ensemble (GLENS) scenario, we develop a set of performance goals for monthly temperature, precipitation, drought index, soil water, solar flux, and surface runoff. The assessment assumes that targets may be framed in the context of risk-risk via a risk ratio, or the ratio of the risk of exceeding the performance goal for the SAI scenario against the risk of exceeding the performance goal for the emissions scenario. From regional responses, across multiple climate variables, it is then possible to assess which pathway carries lower risk relative to the goals. The assessment is not comprehensive but rather a demonstration of the evaluation of an SAI scenario. Future work is needed to develop a more complete assessment that would provide additional simulations to cover parametric and aleatory uncertainty and enable a deeper understanding of impacts, informed scenario selection, and allow further refinements to the approach.

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Sandia National Laboratories Ecosystem for Open Science: Metadata Schema v0.2 Description

Aur, Katherine A.; Young, Brian A.; Wheeler, Lauren B.; Borden, Rose M.; Pate, Russel

The Ecosystem for Open Science (eOS) initiative was established in 2019. Its objective is improving openness and sharing of data and information across Defense Nuclear Nonproliferation (DNN) Research and Development (R&D) activities. To support this initiative, the eOS team at Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) developed metadata and data standards and proposed a machine-readable metadata schema. The nuclear explosion monitoring field was selected as a focus area due to its the wide range of pertinent phenomenologies.We developed the DCAT-eOS-AP metadata schema extending the Data Catalog Vocabulary version 2 (DCATv2) standard using an application profile (AP), to fit the needs of multi-disciplinary NA-22 projects. The DCAT-eOS-AP metadata schema describes data at different levels of granularity ranging from general descriptions to more domain-specific granular metadata. Its implementation and serialization is flexible with the ability to include new file or data types. Thus, it will scale with the ever-increasing data management needs of government research. Due to the multitude of phenomenologies represented in the DCAT-eOS-AP schema, we anticipate that it will be easily extensible to various projects across many DOE mission areas. This document describes data management challenges faced within the DNN R&D portfolio and provides insight on how metadata and data standards/guidelines combined with a comprehensive metadata schema can add value to programs throughout the Department of Energy (DOE). It reviews the importance of metadata standards, FAIR (Findability, Accessibility, Interoperability, and Reusability) data principles, and metadata schemas. Additionally, it summarizes input from subject matter experts (SME) at SNL and other National Laboratories that resulted in metadata and data standards/guidelines encompassing domains relevant to NA-22 projects. Finally, we discuss the DCAT-eOS-AP metadata development. Implementation recommendations and future development directions are included for those keen on adopting the DCAT-eOS-AP metadata schema.

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The effects of atmospheric models on the estimation of infrasonic source functions at the source physics experiment

Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America

Poppeliers, Christian P.; Wheeler, Lauren B.; Preston, Leiph A.

We invert infrasound signals for an equivalent seismoacoustic source function using different atmospheric models to produce the necessary Green’s functions. The infrasound signals were produced by a series of underground chemical explosions as part of the Source Physics Experiment (SPE). In a previous study, we inverted the infrasound data using so-called predictive atmospheric models, which were based on historic, regional-scaled, publicly available weather observations interpolated onto a 3D grid. For the work presented here, we invert the same infrasound data, but using atmospheric models based on weather data collected in a time window that includes the approximate time of the explosion experiments, which we term postdictive models. We build two versions of the postdictive models for each SPE event: one that is based solely on the regional scaled observations, and one that is based on both regional scaled observations combined with on-site observations obtained by a weather sonde released at the time of the SPE. We then invert the observed data set three times, once for each atmospheric model type. We find that the estimated seismoacoustic source functions are relatively similar in waveform shape regardless of which atmospheric model that we used to construct the Green’s functions. However, we find that the amplitude of the estimated source functions is systematically dependent on the atmospheric model type: using the predictive atmospheric models to invert the data generally yields estimated source functions that are larger in amplitude than those estimated using the postdictive models.

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Deciphering Atmospheric Ice Nucleation using Molecular-Scale Microscopy

Thurmer, Konrad T.; Friddle, Raymond W.; Wheeler, Lauren B.; Bartelt, Norman C.; Roesler, Erika L.; Kolasinski, Robert K.

Atmospheric ice affects Earth's radiative properties and initiates most precipitation. Growing ice typically requires a particle, often airborne mineral dust, e.g., to catalyze freezing of supercooled cloud droplets. How chemistry, structure and morphology determine the ice-nucleating ability of minerals remains elusive. Not surprisingly, poor understanding of a erosol-cloud interactions is a major source of uncertainty in climate models. In this project, we combine d optical microscopy with atomic force microscopy to explore the mechanisms of initial ice formation on alkali feldspar, a mineral proposed to dominate ice nucleation in Earth's atmosphere. When cold air becomes supersaturated with respect to water, we discovered that supercooled liquid water condenses at steps without having to overcome a nucleation barrier, and subsequently freezes quickly. Our results imply that steps, common even on macroscopically flat feldspar surfaces, can accelerate water condensation followed by freezing, thus promoting glaciation and dehydration of mixed - phase clouds. Motivated by the fact that current climate simulations do not properly account for feldspar's extreme efficiency to nucleate ice, we modified DOE's climate model, the Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM), to increase the activation of ice nucleation on feldspar dust. This included adding a new aerosol tracer into the model and updating the ice nucleation parameterization, based on Classical Nucleation Theory, for multiple mineral dust tracers. Although t he se modifications have little impact on global averages , predictions of regional averages can be strongly affected .

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Building and Running TDAAPS Models: Nudged WRF Hindcasts

Wheeler, Lauren B.; Poppeliers, Christian P.; Preston, Leiph A.

This work is a follow-on guide to running the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model from Aur et al, (2018), Building and Running 1 DAAPS Models: IFRF Postdictions. This guide details running WRF in a nudged configuration, where the u and v wind components, temperature, and moisture within a specified spatial and temporal window, are adjusted towards the observations, radiosonde observations in this case, using WRF's observation nudging technique. The primary modification to this methodology from Aur et al. (2018), is the use of the OBSGRID program to generate the nudging files and the updates to the namelist.input file. These steps, combined with those outlined in Aur et al. (2018), will generate a nudged WRF hindcast (or postdiction) simulation.

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Building and Running TDAAPS Models: WRF Postdictions

Poppeliers, Christian P.; Aur, Katherine A.; Wheeler, Lauren B.; Preston, Leiph A.

This document serves to guide a researcher through the process of running the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model and incorporating observations into coarse resolution reanalysis products to model atmospheric conditions at high (50 m) resolution. This documentation is specific to WRF and the WRF Preprocessing System (WPS) version 3.8.1 and the Objective Analysis (OBSGRID) code released on April 8, 2016. Output from WRF serves as an input into the Time-Domain Atmospheric Acoustic Propagation Suite (TDAAPS) which performs staggered-grid finite difference modeling of the acoustic velocity pressure system to produce Green's functions through these atmospheric models.

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Results 1–25 of 28
Results 1–25 of 28