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  4. A Python library for computing individual and merged non-CO2 algorithmic climate change functions: CLIMaCCF V1.0
 
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A Python library for computing individual and merged non-CO2 algorithmic climate change functions: CLIMaCCF V1.0

Citation Link: https://doi.org/10.15480/882.8681
Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2023-08-02
Sprache
English
Author(s)
Dietmüller, Simone  
Matthes, Sigrun  
Dahlmann, Katrin  
Yamashita, Hiroshi  
Simorgh, Abolfazl  
Soler, Manuel  
Linke, Florian  
Lufttransportsysteme M-28  
Lührs, Benjamin 
Lufttransportsysteme M-28  
Mendiguchia Meuser, Maximilian 
Lufttransportsysteme M-28  
Weder, Christian Martin  
Lufttransportsysteme M-28  
Grewe, Volker  
Yin, Feijia  
Castino, Federica  
TORE-DOI
10.15480/882.8681
TORE-URI
https://hdl.handle.net/11420/43573
Journal
Geoscientific model development  
Volume
16
Issue
15
Start Page
4405
End Page
4425
Citation
Geoscientific Model Development 16 (15): 4405-4425 (2023-08-02)
Publisher DOI
10.5194/gmd-16-4405-2023
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85170851212
Publisher
Copernicus Publications
Aviation aims to reduce its climate effect by adopting trajectories that avoid regions of the atmosphere where aviation emissions have a large impact. To that end, prototype algorithmic climate change functions (aCCFs) can be used, which provide spatially and temporally resolved information on aviation's climate effect in terms of future near-surface temperature change. These aCCFs can be calculated with meteorological input data obtained from, e.g., numerical weather prediction models. We present here the open-source Python library called CLIMaCCF, an easy-to-use and flexible tool which efficiently calculates both the individual aCCFs (i.e., aCCF of water vapor, nitrogen oxide (NOx)-induced ozone production and methane depletion, and contrail cirrus) and the merged non-CO2 aCCFs that combine all these individual contributions. To construct merged aCCFs all individual aCCFs are converted to the same physical unit. This unit conversion needs the technical specification of aircraft and engine parameters, i.e., NOx emission indices and flown distance per kilogram of burned fuel. These aircraft- and engine-specific values are provided within CLIMaCCF version V1.0 for a set of aggregated aircraft and engine classes (i.e., regional, single-aisle, wide-body). Moreover, CLIMaCCF allows the user to choose from a range of physical climate metrics (i.e., average temperature response for pulse or future scenario emissions over the time horizons of 20, 50, or 100 years). Finally, we demonstrate the abilities of CLIMaCCF through a series of example applications.
DDC Class
620: Engineering
Publication version
publishedVersion
Lizenz
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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