Longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice clouds

In addition to microphysical changes in clouds, changes in nucleation processes of ice cloud due to aerosols would result in substantial changes in cloud top temperature as mildly supercooled clouds are glaciated through heterogenous nucleation processes. Measurements from multiple sensors on multip...

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Main Authors: Q. Min, R. Li
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2010-08-01
Series:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Online Access:http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/10/7753/2010/acp-10-7753-2010.pdf
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spelling doaj-1d665d47c1ef4b1ba77c6b59c1b813062020-11-25T01:29:49ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics1680-73161680-73242010-08-0110167753776110.5194/acp-10-7753-2010Longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice cloudsQ. MinR. LiIn addition to microphysical changes in clouds, changes in nucleation processes of ice cloud due to aerosols would result in substantial changes in cloud top temperature as mildly supercooled clouds are glaciated through heterogenous nucleation processes. Measurements from multiple sensors on multiple observing platforms over the Atlantic Ocean show that the cloud effective temperature increases with mineral dust loading with a slope of +3.06 °C per unit aerosol optical depth. The macrophysical changes in ice cloud top distributions as a consequence of mineral dust-cloud interaction exert a strong cooling effect (up to 16 Wm<sup>−2</sup>) of thermal infrared radiation on cloud systems. Induced changes of ice particle size by mineral dusts influence cloud emissivity and play a minor role in modulating the outgoing longwave radiation for optically thin ice clouds. Such a strong cooling forcing of thermal infrared radiation would have significant impacts on cloud systems and subsequently on climate. http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/10/7753/2010/acp-10-7753-2010.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Q. Min
R. Li
spellingShingle Q. Min
R. Li
Longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice clouds
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
author_facet Q. Min
R. Li
author_sort Q. Min
title Longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice clouds
title_short Longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice clouds
title_full Longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice clouds
title_fullStr Longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice clouds
title_full_unstemmed Longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice clouds
title_sort longwave indirect effect of mineral dusts on ice clouds
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics
issn 1680-7316
1680-7324
publishDate 2010-08-01
description In addition to microphysical changes in clouds, changes in nucleation processes of ice cloud due to aerosols would result in substantial changes in cloud top temperature as mildly supercooled clouds are glaciated through heterogenous nucleation processes. Measurements from multiple sensors on multiple observing platforms over the Atlantic Ocean show that the cloud effective temperature increases with mineral dust loading with a slope of +3.06 °C per unit aerosol optical depth. The macrophysical changes in ice cloud top distributions as a consequence of mineral dust-cloud interaction exert a strong cooling effect (up to 16 Wm<sup>−2</sup>) of thermal infrared radiation on cloud systems. Induced changes of ice particle size by mineral dusts influence cloud emissivity and play a minor role in modulating the outgoing longwave radiation for optically thin ice clouds. Such a strong cooling forcing of thermal infrared radiation would have significant impacts on cloud systems and subsequently on climate.
url http://www.atmos-chem-phys.net/10/7753/2010/acp-10-7753-2010.pdf
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