4.7 Review

IMPACT OF AEROSOLS ON CONVECTIVE CLOUDS AND PRECIPITATION

Journal

REVIEWS OF GEOPHYSICS
Volume 50, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2011RG000369

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. NASA Headquarters
  2. NASA Precipitation Measurement Mission (PMM)
  3. NASA Modeling Analysis Prediction (MAP)
  4. NSF [AGS-0944121, AGS-1118325]
  5. Singapore NRF through the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology
  6. corporate and foundation sponsors of the MIT
  7. NASA [NNX08AH71G]
  8. DOE [DEFG0208ER64571]
  9. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2006CB403706, 2011CB403405]
  10. NOAA Office of Global Programs [NA17RJ1226]
  11. [NSC 98-2111-M-002-001]
  12. [NSC 99-2111-M-002-009-MY3]
  13. Directorate For Geosciences
  14. Div Atmospheric & Geospace Sciences [0944121] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Aerosols are a critical factor in the atmospheric hydrological cycle and radiation budget. As a major agent for clouds to form and a significant attenuator of solar radiation, aerosols affect climate in several ways. Current research suggests that aerosol effects on clouds could further extend to precipitation, both through the formation of cloud particles and by exerting persistent radiative forcing on the climate system that disturbs dynamics. However, the various mechanisms behind these effects, in particular, the ones connected to precipitation, are not yet well understood. The atmospheric and climate communities have long been working to gain a better grasp of these critical effects and hence to reduce the significant uncertainties in climate prediction resulting from such a lack of adequate knowledge. Here we review past efforts and summarize our current understanding of the effect of aerosols on convective precipitation processes from theoretical analysis of microphysics, observational evidence, and a range of numerical model simulations. In addition, the discrepancies between results simulated by models, as well as those between simulations and observations, are presented. Specifically, this paper addresses the following topics: (1) fundamental theories of aerosol effects on microphysics and precipitation processes, (2) observational evidence of the effect of aerosols on precipitation processes, (3) signatures of the aerosol impact on precipitation from large-scale analyses, (4) results from cloud-resolving model simulations, and (5) results from large-scale numerical model simulations. Finally, several future research directions for gaining a better understanding of aerosol-cloud-precipitation interactions are suggested.

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