Abstract
Abstract. Clouds play an important role in the climate system: (1) cooling Earth
by reflecting incoming sunlight to space and (2) warming Earth by
reducing thermal energy loss to space. Cloud radiative effects are
especially important in polar regions and have the potential to
significantly alter the impact of sea ice decline on the surface radiation
budget. Using CERES (Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System) data and 32 CMIP5 (Coupled Model Intercomparison Project) climate models, we quantify the
influence of polar clouds on the radiative impact of polar sea ice
variability. Our results show that the cloud short-wave cooling effect
strongly influences the impact of sea ice variability on the surface
radiation budget and does so in a counter-intuitive manner over the polar
seas: years with less sea ice and a larger net surface radiative flux show a
more negative cloud radiative effect. Our results indicate that 66±2%
of this change in the net cloud radiative effect is due to the reduction in
surface albedo and that the remaining 34±1 % is due to an increase in cloud
cover and optical thickness. The overall cloud radiative damping effect is
56±2 % over the Antarctic and 47±3 % over the Arctic. Thus,
present-day cloud properties significantly reduce the net radiative impact
of sea ice loss on the Arctic and Antarctic surface radiation budgets. As a
result, climate models must accurately represent present-day polar cloud
properties in order to capture the surface radiation budget impact of polar sea ice loss and thus the surface albedo feedback.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Water Science and Technology
Cited by
26 articles.
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