Publication | Open Access
Constraining cloud lifetime effects of aerosols using A‐Train satellite observations
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Citations
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References
2012
Year
EngineeringClimate ModelingAtmospheric ModelEarth ScienceAerosol LoadingAtmospheric ScienceCloud Lifetime EffectsAerosol SamplingAerosol Indirect EffectsClimate ChangeClimate SciencesAerosol FormationCloud DynamicIndirect EffectsCloud PhysicClimatologyMeteorological ForcingRemote SensingClimate Modelling
Aerosol indirect effects have remained the largest uncertainty in estimates of the radiative forcing of past and future climate change. Observational constraints on cloud lifetime effects are particularly challenging since it is difficult to separate aerosol effects from meteorological influences. Here we use three global climate models, including a multi‐scale aerosol‐climate model PNNL‐MMF, to show that the dependence of the probability of precipitation on aerosol loading, termed the precipitation frequency susceptibility ( S pop ), is a good measure of the liquid water path response to aerosol perturbation ( λ ), as both S pop and λ strongly depend on the magnitude of autoconversion, a model representation of precipitation formation via collisions among cloud droplets. This provides a method to use satellite observations to constrain cloud lifetime effects in global climate models. S pop in marine clouds estimated from CloudSat, MODIS and AMSR‐E observations is substantially lower than that from global climate models and suggests a liquid water path increase of less than 5% from doubled cloud condensation nuclei concentrations. This implies a substantially smaller impact on shortwave cloud radiative forcing over ocean due to aerosol indirect effects than simulated by current global climate models (a reduction by one‐third for one of the conventional aerosol‐climate models). Further work is needed to quantify the uncertainties in satellite‐derived estimates of S pop and to examine S pop in high‐resolution models.
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