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Dive into the research topics where Muvva Venkata Ramana is active.

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Featured researches published by Muvva Venkata Ramana.


Nature | 2007

Warming trends in Asia amplified by brown cloud solar absorption

V. Ramanathan; Muvva Venkata Ramana; G. C. Roberts; Dohyeong Kim; Craig Corrigan; Chul Eddy Chung; David Winker

Atmospheric brown clouds are mostly the result of biomass burning and fossil fuel consumption. They consist of a mixture of light-absorbing and light-scattering aerosols and therefore contribute to atmospheric solar heating and surface cooling. The sum of the two climate forcing terms—the net aerosol forcing effect—is thought to be negative and may have masked as much as half of the global warming attributed to the recent rapid rise in greenhouse gases. There is, however, at least a fourfold uncertainty in the aerosol forcing effect. Atmospheric solar heating is a significant source of the uncertainty, because current estimates are largely derived from model studies. Here we use three lightweight unmanned aerial vehicles that were vertically stacked between 0.5 and 3 km over the polluted Indian Ocean. These unmanned aerial vehicles deployed miniaturized instruments measuring aerosol concentrations, soot amount and solar fluxes. During 18 flight missions the three unmanned aerial vehicles were flown with a horizontal separation of tens of metres or less and a temporal separation of less than ten seconds, which made it possible to measure the atmospheric solar heating rates directly. We found that atmospheric brown clouds enhanced lower atmospheric solar heating by about 50 per cent. Our general circulation model simulations, which take into account the recently observed widespread occurrence of vertically extended atmospheric brown clouds over the Indian Ocean and Asia, suggest that atmospheric brown clouds contribute as much as the recent increase in anthropogenic greenhouse gases to regional lower atmospheric warming trends. We propose that the combined warming trend of 0.25 K per decade may be sufficient to account for the observed retreat of the Himalayan glaciers.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Atmospheric brown clouds: Hemispherical and regional variations in long-range transport, absorption, and radiative forcing

V. Ramanathan; F. Li; Muvva Venkata Ramana; P. S. Praveen; Dohyeong Kim; C. E. Corrigan; Hien Van Nguyen; Elizabeth A. Stone; James J. Schauer; G. R. Carmichael; Bhupesh Adhikary; Soon Chang Yoon

polluted oceanic regions, the EC mass exceeds 0.5 m gm 3 , the OC mass exceeds 2 m gm 3 and sulfate mass exceeds 10 m gm 3 from the surface to 3 km. The brown clouds also have strong seasonal dependence. In the tropics the seasonal dependence is driven by pollution accumulating during the dry seasons, December to February in Northern Hemisphere tropics and June to August in Southern Hemisphere tropics. In the extratropics the pollution peaks during the summer. The brown cloud problem is not restricted to the tropical regions. Over the eastern half of US and western Europe the AODs exceeds 0.2 and absorption AODs exceed 0.02. Brown clouds also extend well into the western Pacific Ocean, the Indian Ocean reaching as far south as 60S and the eastern Atlantic Ocean. The largest total SO2 emission occurs over China and US, while SO2 emission per unit surface area is maximum over Germany and England. The largest total EC and OC emissions occur over China, but the largest OC emission per unit surface area occur over India. As a result, the maximum negative annual mean TOA direct forcing is over India and Germany. The surface annual-diurnal mean dimming over the regional hot spots is of the order of 10 W m 2 and 20 W m 2 over megacity hotpots.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

Simultaneous observations of aerosol–cloud–albedo interactions with three stacked unmanned aerial vehicles

G. C. Roberts; Muvva Venkata Ramana; C. E. Corrigan; Dohyeong Kim; V. Ramanathan

Aerosol impacts on climate change are still poorly understood, in part, because the few observations and methods for detecting their effects are not well established. For the first time, the enhancement in cloud albedo is directly measured on a cloud-by-cloud basis and linked to increasing aerosol concentrations by using multiple autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles to simultaneously observe the cloud microphysics, vertical aerosol distribution, and associated solar radiative fluxes. In the presence of long-range transport of dust and anthropogenic pollution, the trade cumuli have higher droplet concentrations and are on average brighter. Our observations suggest a higher sensitivity of radiative forcing by trade cumuli to increases in cloud droplet concentrations than previously reported owing to a constrained droplet radius such that increases in droplet concentrations also increase cloud liquid water content. This aerosol-cloud forcing efficiency is as much as −60 W m−2 per 100% percent cloud fraction for a doubling of droplet concentrations and associated increase of liquid water content. Finally, we develop a strategy for detecting aerosol–cloud interactions based on a nondimensional scaling analysis that relates the contribution of single clouds to albedo measurements and illustrates the significance of characterizing cloud morphology in resolving radiometric measurements. This study demonstrates that aerosol–cloud–albedo interactions can be directly observed by simultaneous observations below, in, and above the clouds.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2004

Analysis of Multi‐angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) aerosol optical depths over greater India during winter 2001–2004

L. Di Girolamo; Tami C. Bond; D. Bramer; David J. Diner; F. Fettinger; Ralph A. Kahn; John V. Martonchik; Muvva Venkata Ramana; V. Ramanathan; Philip J. Rasch


Pure and Applied Geophysics | 2005

Persistent, Widespread, and Strongly Absorbing Haze Over the Himalayan Foothills and the Indo-Gangetic Plains

V. Ramanathan; Muvva Venkata Ramana


Nature Geoscience | 2010

Warming influenced by the ratio of black carbon to sulphate and the black-carbon source

Muvva Venkata Ramana; V. Ramanathan; Y. Feng; Soon Chang Yoon; S. W. Kim; G. R. Carmichael; J. J. Schauer


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

Capturing vertical profiles of aerosols and black carbon over the Indian Ocean using autonomous unmanned aerial vehicles

C. E. Corrigan; G. C. Roberts; Muvva Venkata Ramana; Dohyeong Kim; V. Ramanathan


Geophysical Research Letters | 2004

The direct observations of large aerosol radiative forcing in the Himalayan region

Muvva Venkata Ramana; V. Ramanathan; I. A. Podgorny; Bidya Banmali Pradhan; Basanta Shrestha


Geophysical Research Letters | 2002

Absorbing mediterranean aerosols lead to a large reduction in the solar radiation at the surface

Krzysztof M. Markowicz; Piotr J. Flatau; Muvva Venkata Ramana; Paul J. Crutzen; V. Ramanathan


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2007

Characterization of the seasonal cycle of south Asian aerosols: A Regional-Scale Modeling Analysis.

Bhupesh Adhikary; Gregory R. Carmichael; Youhua Tang; L. Ruby Leung; Yun Qian; James J. Schauer; Elizabeth A. Stone; V. Ramanathan; Muvva Venkata Ramana

Collaboration


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V. Ramanathan

University of California

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C. E. Corrigan

University of California

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Dohyeong Kim

Seoul National University

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David J. Diner

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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James J. Schauer

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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John V. Martonchik

California Institute of Technology

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Philip J. Rasch

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Ralph A. Kahn

California Institute of Technology

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