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      Cloud Microphysical Implications for Marine Cloud Brightening: The Importance of the Seeded Particle Size Distribution

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          Abstract

          Marine cloud brightening (MCB) has been proposed as a viable way to counteract global warming by artificially increasing the albedo and lifetime of clouds via deliberate seeding of aerosol particles. Stratocumulus decks, which cover wide swaths of Earth’s surface, are considered the primary target for this geoengineering approach. The macroscale properties of this cloud type exhibit a high sensitivity to cloud microphysics, exposing the potential for undesired changes in cloud optical properties in response to MCB. In this study, we apply a highly detailed Lagrangian cloud model, coupled to an idealized parcel model as well as a full three-dimensional large-eddy simulation model, to show that the choice of seeded particle size distribution is crucial to the success of MCB, and that its efficacy can be significantly reduced by undesirable microphysical processes. The presence of even a small number of large particles in the seeded size spectrum may trigger significant precipitation, which will reduce cloud water and may even break up the cloud deck, reducing the scene albedo and hence counteracting MCB. On the other hand, a seeded spectrum comprising a large number of small particles reduces the fraction of activated cloud droplets and increases entrainment and evaporation of cloud water, which also reduces the efficiency of MCB. In between, there may exist an aerosol size distribution that minimizes undesirable microphysical processes and enables optimal MCB. This optimal size distribution is expected to be case dependent.

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          Most cited references68

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              Untangling aerosol effects on clouds and precipitation in a buffered system.

              It is thought that changes in the concentration of cloud-active aerosol can alter the precipitation efficiency of clouds, thereby changing cloud amount and, hence, the radiative forcing of the climate system. Despite decades of research, it has proved frustratingly difficult to establish climatically meaningful relationships among the aerosol, clouds and precipitation. As a result, the climatic effect of the aerosol remains controversial. We propose that the difficulty in untangling relationships among the aerosol, clouds and precipitation reflects the inadequacy of existing tools and methodologies and a failure to account for processes that buffer cloud and precipitation responses to aerosol perturbations.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
                American Meteorological Society
                0022-4928
                1520-0469
                October 2021
                October 2021
                : 78
                : 10
                : 3247-3262
                Affiliations
                [1 ]a Ludwig-Maximilans-Universität München, Meteorologisches Institut, Munich, Germany
                [2 ]b Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado
                [3 ]c Chemical Sciences Laboratory, NOAA/Earth System Research Laboratories, Boulder, Colorado
                Article
                10.1175/JAS-D-21-0077.1
                44bbf08f-80de-4904-9831-51f138aad825
                © 2021

                http://www.ametsoc.org/PUBSReuseLicenses

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