Wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather: A case study of the August 2021 fires in Greece using the WRF‐Chem model

Abstract Wildfires are significant contributors to atmospheric gases and aerosols, impacting air quality and composition. This pollution from fires also affects radiative forcing, influencing short‐term weather patterns and climate dynamics. Our research employs the Weather Research and Forecasting...

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Main Authors: Anastasios Rovithakis, Apostolos Voulgarakis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2024-12-01
Series:Atmospheric Science Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.1267
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author Anastasios Rovithakis
Apostolos Voulgarakis
author_facet Anastasios Rovithakis
Apostolos Voulgarakis
author_sort Anastasios Rovithakis
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Wildfires are significant contributors to atmospheric gases and aerosols, impacting air quality and composition. This pollution from fires also affects radiative forcing, influencing short‐term weather patterns and climate dynamics. Our research employs the Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry (WRF‐Chem) to investigate the repercussions of wildfires on aerosol abundances and associated immediate weather responses. We examine the summer season of 2021, a period marked by severe wildfire events in the country during a heatwave period. We conducted sensitivity experiments including and excluding wildfire emissions to measure their effects on aerosol optical depth (AOD), radiative forcing, and weather features such as temperature, humidity, clouds, and atmospheric circulation. Our findings demonstrate that the radiative impacts of wildfires negatively influence the local temperature over the fire smoke plume‐affected areas. Conversely, neighbouring areas of continental Greece experience increases in temperature due to remote effects of wildfire emissions, caused by meteorological feedbacks that reduce atmospheric humidity. Crucially, including fire emissions significantly improves the simulated surface temperatures predicted by the model over the Greek domain. Our work demonstrates that wildfire‐generated aerosols can significantly impact weather conditions and highlights the importance of including both local radiative effects and remote feedback for achieving more accurate weather prediction.
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spelling doaj-art-6b2d8dec7d9b4f649eff114fa2ccf1e02024-12-02T08:39:27ZengWileyAtmospheric Science Letters1530-261X2024-12-012512n/an/a10.1002/asl.1267Wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather: A case study of the August 2021 fires in Greece using the WRF‐Chem modelAnastasios Rovithakis0Apostolos Voulgarakis1School of Chemical and Environmental Engineering Technical University of Crete Chania GreeceSchool of Chemical and Environmental Engineering Technical University of Crete Chania GreeceAbstract Wildfires are significant contributors to atmospheric gases and aerosols, impacting air quality and composition. This pollution from fires also affects radiative forcing, influencing short‐term weather patterns and climate dynamics. Our research employs the Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry (WRF‐Chem) to investigate the repercussions of wildfires on aerosol abundances and associated immediate weather responses. We examine the summer season of 2021, a period marked by severe wildfire events in the country during a heatwave period. We conducted sensitivity experiments including and excluding wildfire emissions to measure their effects on aerosol optical depth (AOD), radiative forcing, and weather features such as temperature, humidity, clouds, and atmospheric circulation. Our findings demonstrate that the radiative impacts of wildfires negatively influence the local temperature over the fire smoke plume‐affected areas. Conversely, neighbouring areas of continental Greece experience increases in temperature due to remote effects of wildfire emissions, caused by meteorological feedbacks that reduce atmospheric humidity. Crucially, including fire emissions significantly improves the simulated surface temperatures predicted by the model over the Greek domain. Our work demonstrates that wildfire‐generated aerosols can significantly impact weather conditions and highlights the importance of including both local radiative effects and remote feedback for achieving more accurate weather prediction.https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.1267Air quality and pollutionAtmosphere‐land interactionsAtmospheric and climate dynamicsPhysical phenomenonTools and methodsWeather and climate prediction
spellingShingle Anastasios Rovithakis
Apostolos Voulgarakis
Wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather: A case study of the August 2021 fires in Greece using the WRF‐Chem model
Atmospheric Science Letters
Air quality and pollution
Atmosphere‐land interactions
Atmospheric and climate dynamics
Physical phenomenon
Tools and methods
Weather and climate prediction
title Wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather: A case study of the August 2021 fires in Greece using the WRF‐Chem model
title_full Wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather: A case study of the August 2021 fires in Greece using the WRF‐Chem model
title_fullStr Wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather: A case study of the August 2021 fires in Greece using the WRF‐Chem model
title_full_unstemmed Wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather: A case study of the August 2021 fires in Greece using the WRF‐Chem model
title_short Wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather: A case study of the August 2021 fires in Greece using the WRF‐Chem model
title_sort wildfire aerosols and their impact on weather a case study of the august 2021 fires in greece using the wrf chem model
topic Air quality and pollution
Atmosphere‐land interactions
Atmospheric and climate dynamics
Physical phenomenon
Tools and methods
Weather and climate prediction
url https://doi.org/10.1002/asl.1267
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AT apostolosvoulgarakis wildfireaerosolsandtheirimpactonweatheracasestudyoftheaugust2021firesingreeceusingthewrfchemmodel