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Cloud-Climate Feedbacks as a Result of Solar Cloud Absorption in the SKYHI General Circulation Model Carynelisa Erlick, Atmospheric Sciences, Hebrew University.

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Presentation on theme: "Cloud-Climate Feedbacks as a Result of Solar Cloud Absorption in the SKYHI General Circulation Model Carynelisa Erlick, Atmospheric Sciences, Hebrew University."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cloud-Climate Feedbacks as a Result of Solar Cloud Absorption in the SKYHI General Circulation Model Carynelisa Erlick, Atmospheric Sciences, Hebrew University V. Ramaswamy, NOAA/GFDL Lynn Russell, Scripps Institute of Oceanography

2 Previous Studies  Anomalous Absorption [Kiehl et al. 1995]  decrease in shortwave flux to the SFC  increase in temperature of upper troposphere  decrease in surface wind speed  decrease in Hadley circulation  global decrease in precipitation and latent heat release  Stratocumulus Dissipation [Ackerman and Toon 1996; Johnson et al. 2004]  decrease in radiative cooling near cloud top  decrease in boundary layer mixing  decrease in water vapor supply  decrease in liquid water path  Forcings and Response: Semi-Direct Effect [Hansen et al. 1997]  decrease in low level cloud cover  increase in shortwave flux to the SFC  increase in global mean surface temperature  Indo-Asian Haze [Ackerman et al. 2000; Ramanathan et al. 2001; Chung et al. 2002]  decrease in net shortwave flux at the SFC  decrease in surface temperature  increase in boundary layer stability  increase in low level convergence  increase in convective rainfall and latent heat release  Semi-Direct Effect [Cook and Highwood 2004]  increase in global mean surface temperature and atmospheric temperature  increase in atmospheric stability  decrease convective cloud amount

3 Goals of This Work  Simulate effect of moderate continental aerosol absorption (not as strong as anomalous absorption)  Simulate non-uniform forcing (matching pattern of cloudiness)  Look at regional responses to global perturbation

4 Marine vs. Continentally Influenced Cloud Monterey Area Ship Track Experiment (MAST), June 1994 clean marine stratocumulus (JDT180, Star Livorno, June 29) continentally influenced stratocumulus (JDT178, Tai He, June 27)

5 Radiative Properties of a Cloud Drop Containing Absorbing Aerosols Calculate the effect refractive index:  linear mixing rule for non-absorbing species *weighted by volume  Maxwell-Garnett theory for absorbing species *assumes a random distribution of absorbing inclusions in an otherwise homogeneous matrix Calculate the drop single scattering parameters  Mie scattering subroutine [Bohren and Huffman, 1983] :  input: drop radius, concentration, effect refractive index  output: extinction coefficient, single scattering albedo, and asymmetry factor  integrate over all drops in distribution non-absorbing mixture (sulfates, nitrates, sea salt) absorbing mixture (soot, dust, organics)

6 Change in Visible Cloud Single Scattering Albedo

7 General Circulation Model (SKYHI) [Hamilton et al., 1995]  40-level finite difference grid  3.0° x 3.6° latitude-longitude resolution  predicted clouds [Wetherald and Manabe, 1988]  a layer is fully cloud covered when RH > 100%  low clouds: 680  1000 mb,  ext ~ 12, r eff = 10  m  middle clouds: 440  680 mb,  ext ~ 3, r eff = 10  m  high clouds: 10  440 mb,  ext ~ 1, r eff = 10  m  Slingo parameterization for cloud radiative properties [Slingo, 1989]  fixed SST’s  shortwave radiation [Freidenreich and Ramaswamy, 1999]  exponential sum-fit technique for water vapor transmission  delta-Eddington method for reflectance and transmittance of scattering layers [Joseph et al., 1976]  adding method to combine layers [Ramaswamy and Bowen, 1994]  wavelengths of perturbation: 0.2  1.2  m  longwave radiation [Schwarzkopf and Ramaswamy, 1999]  simplified exchange approximation method for IR radiative transfer [Schwarzkopf and Fels, 1991]  gaseous absorption approximated over 8 spectral bands

8 Shortwave Forcing = Instantaneous  less upward flux at TOA  less downward flux at SFC

9 Change in Low Cloud Amount and Surface Temperature  decrease in low cloud amount: pattern of response does not match forcing pattern  increase in land surface temperature: heating + dissipation

10 Change in Equilibrium Shortwave Flux  existing low clouds absorb + less low clouds: even less upward flux at TOA, more downward flux at SFC (change in sign!)  SW flux TOA increases more than SW flux SFC  net input to the system  the system warms

11 Change in Global Mean Cloud Amount Profile  control  perturbation  decrease in low cloud amount and total cloud amount

12 Regional Differences in JJA Response: United States and Europe/E. Asia  control  perturbation  decrease in low cloud amount and total cloud amount  increase in shortwave flux to surface  increase in stability *unlike in the RCM the diabatic heating does not translate into an increase in convection but into an increase in horizontal heat advection  decrease in precipitation, soil moisture

13 Regional Differences in JJA Response: N. Africa  control  perturbation  decrease in low cloud amount, increase in middle and high cloud amounts (overall increase)  decrease in shortwave flux to surface  decrease in stability near surface *like in the RCM the diabatic heating does translate into increase in convection  increase in precipitation, soil moisture, evaporation and sublimation, latent heat release from surface

14 Equilibrium Change in Precipitation  negative area average in United States, Europe/E. Asia  positive area average in N. Africa  band of strong increases and decreases around equator

15 Summary  Globally, absorption of solar radiation by clouds causes a warming of the surface, stabilization of the lower troposphere, and a decrease in precipitation.  Regionally, results may vary. In the United States and Europe/E. Asia horizontal heat flux is more efficient, while in N. Africa there is a distinct local (vertical) balance [Chen and Ramaswamy, 1995].


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