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Opportunistic Experiments to Constrain Aerosol Effective Radiative Forcing

Authors :
Matthew W Christensen
Andrew Gettelman
Jan Cermak
Guy Dagan
Michael Diamond
Alyson Douglas
Graham Feingold
Franziska Glassmeier
Tom Goren
Daniel P Grosvenor
Edward Gryspeerdt
Ralph Kahn
Zhanqing Li
Po-Lun Ma
Florent Malavelle
Isabel L McCoy
Daniel T McCoy
Greg McFarquhar
Johannes Mülmenstädt
Sandip Pal
Anna Possner
Adam Povey
Johannes Quaas
Daniel Rosenfeld
Anja Schmidt
Roland Schrödner
Armin Sorooshian
Philip Stier
Velle Toll
Duncan Watson-Parris
Robert Wood
Mingxi Yang
Tianle Yuan
Source :
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics. 22(1)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2022.

Abstract

Aerosol-cloud interactions (ACI) are considered to be the most uncertain driver of present-day radiative forcing due to human activities. The non-linearity of cloud-state changes to aerosol perturbations make it challenging to attribute causality in observed relationships of aerosol radiative forcing. Using correlations to infer causality can be challenging when meteorological variability also drives both aerosol and cloud changes independently. Natural and anthropogenic aerosol perturbations from well defined sources provide ‘opportunistic experiments’ (also known as natural experiments) to investigate ACI in cases where causality may be more confidently inferred. These perturbations cover a wide range of locations and spatio-temporal scales, including point sources such as volcanic eruptions or industrial sources, plumes from biomass burning or forest fires, and tracks from individual ships or shipping corridors.We review the different experimental conditions and conduct a synthesis of the available satellite data sets and field campaigns to place these opportunistic experiments on a common footing, facilitating new insights and a clearer understanding of key uncertainties in aerosol radiative forcing. Cloud albedo perturbations are strongly sensitive to background meteorological conditions. Strong liquid water path increases due to aerosol perturbations are largely ruled out by averaging across experiments. Opportunistic experiments have significantly improved process-level understanding of ACI, but it remains unclear how reliably the relationships found can be scaled to the global level, thus demonstrating a need for deeper investigation in order to improve assessments of aerosol radiative forcing and climate change.

Subjects

Subjects :
Geosciences (General)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16807324 and 16807316
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Notes :
509496.02.03.01.17.25, , 281945.02.47.04.75
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20220005892
Document Type :
Report
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-22-641-2022