Observing Aerosol Primary Convective Invigoration and Its Meteorological Feedback

Author:

Zang Lin1ORCID,Rosenfeld Daniel12ORCID,Pan Zengxin2ORCID,Mao Feiyue34ORCID,Zhu Yannian56,Lu Xin7ORCID,Gong Wei14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Electronic Information Wuhan University Wuhan China

2. Institute of Earth Sciences The Hebrew University of Jerusalem Jerusalem Israel

3. School of Remote Sensing and Information Engineering Wuhan University Wuhan China

4. State Key Laboratory of Information Engineering in Surveying, Mapping, and Remote Sensing Wuhan University Wuhan China

5. School of Atmospheric Sciences Nanjing University Nanjing China

6. Joint International Research Laboratory of Atmospheric and Earth System Sciences Institute for Climate and Global Change Research Nanjing University Nanjing China

7. School of Geoscience and Technology Zhengzhou University Zhengzhou China

Abstract

AbstractAerosols can invigorate deep convective clouds (DCCs) directly by nucleating more cloud droplets, named as Primary Aerosol Convective Invigoration (PAI). However, the covarying Meteorology‐Aerosol Invigoration (MAI) effect on DCC has been a long‐standing issue in quantifying PAI's contribution. Here, observations show that PAI causes positive feedback from DCC to meteorology, further invigorating DCC through enhanced humidity, updraft and destabilization, thereby adding to MAI. Further, PAI is separated from MAI observationally by quantifying the sensitivity of DCC properties to aerosol changes under fixed meteorology through the artificial neural network. When fine aerosol changes from the cleanest to optimal concentration (5 μg m−3), PAI contributes 72% ± 2% of the total aerosol‐associated cloud top cooling by 12°C, 42% ± 4% of the 30% prolonged lifetime, and 50% ± 4% of the more than doubled rainfall. This result underlines the comparable magnitudes of PAI and MAI, which have not been considered until now in weather and climate prediction.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

United States - Israel Binational Science Foundation

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Geophysics

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