Response of surface shortwave cloud radiative effect to greenhouse gases and aerosols and its impact on summer maximum temperature
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Published:2020-07-16
Issue:13
Volume:20
Page:8251-8266
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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:
Tang TaoORCID, Shindell DrewORCID, Zhang YuqiangORCID, Voulgarakis Apostolos, Lamarque Jean-FrancoisORCID, Myhre GunnarORCID, Stjern Camilla W.ORCID, Faluvegi Gregory, Samset Bjørn H.
Abstract
Abstract. Shortwave cloud radiative effects (SWCREs), defined as the difference
of the shortwave radiative flux between all-sky and clear-sky conditions
at the surface, have been reported to play an important role in
influencing the Earth's energy budget and temperature extremes. In
this study, we employed a set of global climate models to examine the
SWCRE responses to CO2, black carbon (BC) aerosols, and
sulfate aerosols in boreal summer over the Northern Hemisphere. We
found that CO2 causes positive SWCRE changes over most of
the NH, and BC causes similar positive responses over North America,
Europe, and eastern China but negative SWCRE over India and tropical
Africa. When normalized by effective radiative forcing, the SWCRE from
BC is roughly 3–5 times larger than that from CO2. SWCRE
change is mainly due to cloud cover changes resulting from changes
in relative humidity (RH) and, to a lesser extent, changes in cloud
liquid water, circulation, dynamics, and stability. The SWCRE response
to sulfate aerosols, however, is negligible compared to that for
CO2 and BC because part of the radiation scattered by clouds
under all-sky conditions will also be scattered by aerosols under
clear-sky conditions. Using a multilinear regression model, it is
found that mean daily maximum temperature (Tmax) increases
by 0.15 and 0.13 K per watt per square meter (W m−2) increase in local
SWCRE under the CO2 and BC experiment, respectively. When
domain-averaged, the contribution of SWCRE change to summer mean
Tmax changes was 10 %–30 % under CO2
forcing and 30 %–50 % under BC forcing, varying by region,
which can have important implications for extreme climatic events and
socioeconomic activities.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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