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Flood or Drought: How Do Aerosols Affect Precipitation?
2.3K
Citations
52
References
2008
Year
ClimatologyMeteorologyEarth ScienceEngineeringAerosol TransportDroughtAtmospheric ScienceCloud Condensation NucleiAerosol FormationCloud DynamicAir QualityDrought ForecastingAerosol Haze LayerAir PollutionCcn ActivitiesPrecipitationClimate Change
Aerosols act as cloud condensation nuclei, influencing cloud properties and precipitation, with high concentrations both suppressing and enhancing rainfall depending on radiative and CCN effects. The authors introduce a conceptual model to reconcile the contradictory impacts of aerosols on precipitation.
Aerosols serve as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) and thus have a substantial effect on cloud properties and the initiation of precipitation. Large concentrations of human-made aerosols have been reported to both decrease and increase rainfall as a result of their radiative and CCN activities. At one extreme, pristine tropical clouds with low CCN concentrations rain out too quickly to mature into long-lived clouds. On the other hand, heavily polluted clouds evaporate much of their water before precipitation can occur, if they can form at all given the reduced surface heating resulting from the aerosol haze layer. We propose a conceptual model that explains this apparent dichotomy.
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