4.6 Article

A contribution by ice nuclei to global warming

Journal

QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY
Volume 135, Issue 643, Pages 1614-1629

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/qj.449

Keywords

TRMM; cloud-resolving model

Funding

  1. NASA Headquarters Atmospheric Dynamics and Thermodynamics Program
  2. NASA Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM)
  3. Office of Science (BER)
  4. US Department of Energy/Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (DOE/ARM) Interagency Agreement [DE-AI02-04ER63755]
  5. NASA
  6. DOE Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program
  7. University of California Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory [W-7405-Eng-48]

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Ice nuclei (IN) significantly affect clouds via supercooled droplets, that in turn modulate atmospheric radiation and thus climate change. Since the IN effect is relatively strong in stratiform clouds but weak in convective ones, the overall effect depends on the ratio of stratiform to convective cloud amount. In this paper, ten years of TRMM (Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission) satellite data are analyzed to confirm that stratiform precipitation fraction increases with increasing latitude, which implies that the IN effect is stronger at higher latitudes. To quantitatively evaluate the IN effect versus latitude, large-scale forcing data from ten field campaigns are used to drive a cloud-resolving model to generate long-term cloud simulations. As revealed in the simulations, the increase in the net downward radiative flux at the top of the atmosphere from doubling the current IN concentrations is larger at higher latitude, which is attributed to the meridional tendency in the stratiform precipitation fraction. Surface warming from doubling the IN concentrations, based on the radiative balance of the globe, is compared with that from anthropogenic CO(2). It is found that the former effect is stronger than the latter in middle and high latitudes but not in the Tropics. With regard to the impact of IN on global warming, there are two factors to consider: the radiative effect from increasing the IN concentration and the increase in IN concentration itself. The former relies on cloud ensembles and thus varies mainly with latitude. In contrast, the latter relies on IN sources (e.g. the land surface distribution) and thus varies not only with latitude but also longitude. Global desertification and industrialization provide clues on the geographic variation of the increase in IN concentration since pre-industrial times. Thus, their effect on global warming can be inferred and can then be compared with observations. A general match in geographic and seasonal variations between the inferred and observed warming suggests that IN may have contributed positively to global warming over the past decades, especially in middle and high latitudes. Copyright (C) 2009 Royal Meteorological Society

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