Impact of biomass burning aerosols on radiation, clouds, and precipitation over the Amazon: relative importance of aerosol–cloud and aerosol–radiation interactions
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Published:2020-11-10
Issue:21
Volume:20
Page:13283-13301
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ISSN:1680-7324
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Container-title:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Chem. Phys.
Author:
Liu Lixia, Cheng YafangORCID, Wang Siwen, Wei Chao, Pöhlker Mira L., Pöhlker ChristopherORCID, Artaxo PauloORCID, Shrivastava ManishORCID, Andreae Meinrat O.ORCID, Pöschl UlrichORCID, Su HangORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Biomass burning (BB) aerosols can influence regional and global
climate through interactions with radiation, clouds, and precipitation.
Here, we investigate the impact of BB aerosols on the energy balance and
hydrological cycle over the Amazon Basin during the dry season. We performed simulations with a fully coupled meteorology–chemistry model, the Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with Chemistry (WRF-Chem), for a range of different BB emission scenarios to explore and characterize nonlinear effects and individual contributions from
aerosol–radiation interactions (ARIs) and aerosol–cloud interactions (ACIs).
The ARIs of BB aerosols tend to suppress low-level liquid clouds by local
warming and increased evaporation and to facilitate the formation of
high-level ice clouds by enhancing updrafts and condensation at high
altitudes. In contrast, the ACIs of BB aerosol particles tend to enhance the
formation and lifetime of low-level liquid clouds by providing more cloud
condensation nuclei (CCN) and to suppress the formation of high-level ice
clouds by reducing updrafts and condensable water vapor at high altitudes
(>8 km). For scenarios representing the lower and upper limits of BB emission
estimates for recent years (2002–2016), we obtained total regional BB
aerosol radiative forcings of −0.2 and 1.5 W m−2,
respectively, showing that the influence of BB aerosols on the regional
energy balance can range from modest cooling to strong warming. We find that
ACIs dominate at low BB emission rates and low aerosol optical depth (AOD),
leading to an increased cloud liquid water path (LWP) and negative radiative
forcing, whereas ARIs dominate at high BB emission rates and high AOD,
leading to a reduction of LWP and positive radiative forcing. In all
scenarios, BB aerosols led to a decrease in the frequency of occurrence and
rate of precipitation, caused primarily by ACI effects at low aerosol
loading and by ARI effects at high aerosol loading. The dependence of
precipitation reduction on BB aerosol loading is greater in a strong
convective regime than under weakly convective conditions. Overall, our results show that ACIs tend to saturate at high aerosol loading,
whereas the strength of ARIs continues to increase and plays a more important
role in highly polluted episodes and regions. This should hold not only for
BB aerosols over the Amazon, but also for other light-absorbing aerosols
such as fossil fuel combustion aerosols in industrialized and densely
populated areas. The importance of ARIs at high aerosol loading highlights
the need for accurately characterizing aerosol optical properties in the
investigation of aerosol effects on clouds, precipitation, and climate.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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