Affiliation:
1. Fredy and Nadine Herrmann Institute of Earth Sciences Hebrew University Jerusalem Israel
2. Chemical Sciences Laboratory National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Boulder CO USA
3. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences University of Colorado Boulder Boulder CO USA
Abstract
AbstractUnderstanding the impact of various climate forcing agents, such as aerosols, on extreme precipitation is socially and scientifically vital. While anthropogenic absorbing aerosols influence Earth's energy balance and atmospheric convection, their role in extreme events remains unclear. This paper uses convective‐resolving radiative‐convective‐equilibrium simulations, with fixed solar radiation, to investigate the influence of absorbing aerosols on extreme precipitation comprehensively. Our findings reveal an underappreciated mechanism through which absorbing aerosols can, under certain conditions, strongly intensify extreme precipitation. Notably, we demonstrate that a mechanism previously reported for much warmer (hothouse) climates, where intense rainfall alternates with multi‐day dry spells, can operate under current realistic conditions due to absorbing aerosol influence. This mechanism operates when an aerosol perturbation shifts the lower tropospheric radiative heating rate to positive values, generating a strong inhibition layer. Our work highlights an additional potential effect of absorbing aerosols, with implications for climate change mitigation and disaster risk management.
Funder
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)