On the representation of aerosol activation and its influence on model-derived estimates of the aerosol indirect effect
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Published:2018-06-06
Issue:11
Volume:18
Page:7961-7983
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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:
Rothenberg DanielORCID, Avramov Alexander, Wang ChienORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Interactions between aerosol
particles and clouds contribute a great deal of uncertainty to the scientific
community's understanding of anthropogenic climate forcing. Aerosol particles
serve as the nucleation sites for cloud droplets, establishing a direct
linkage between anthropogenic particulate emissions and clouds in the climate
system. To resolve this linkage, the community has developed
parameterizations of aerosol activation which can be used in global climate
models to interactively predict cloud droplet number concentrations (CDNCs).
However, different activation schemes can exhibit different sensitivities to
aerosol perturbations in different meteorological or pollution regimes. To
assess the impact these different sensitivities have on climate forcing, we
have coupled three different core activation schemes and variants with the
CESM-MARC (two-Moment, Multi-Modal, Mixing-state-resolving Aerosol model for Research of Climate (MARC) coupled
with the National Center for Atmospheric Research's (NCAR) Community Earth
System Model (CESM; version 1.2)). Although the model produces a reasonable
present-day CDNC climatology when compared with observations regardless of
the scheme used, ΔCDNCs between the present and preindustrial era
regionally increase by over 100 % in zonal mean when using the most
sensitive parameterization. These differences in activation sensitivity may
lead to a different evolution of the model meteorology, and ultimately to a
spread of over 0.8 W m−2 in global average shortwave indirect
effect (AIE) diagnosed from the model, a range which is as large as the
inter-model spread from the AeroCom intercomparison. Model-derived AIE
strongly scales with the simulated preindustrial CDNC burden, and those
models with the greatest preindustrial CDNC tend to have the smallest AIE,
regardless of their ΔCDNC. This suggests that present-day evaluations
of aerosol-climate models may not provide useful constraints on the magnitude
of the AIE, which will arise from differences in model estimates of the
preindustrial aerosol and cloud climatology.
Funder
Division of Graduate Education Directorate for Geosciences Office of Science
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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