March 4, 2016
Journal Article

On the characteristics of aerosol indirect effect based on dynamic regimes in global climate models

Abstract

Aerosol-cloud interactions continue to constitute a major source of uncertainty for the estimate of climate radiative forcing. The variation of aerosol indirect effects (AIE) in climate models is investigated across different dynamical regimes, determined by monthly mean 500 hPa vertical pressure velocity (?500), lower-tropospheric stability (LTS) and large-scale surface precipitation rate derived from several global climate models (GCMs), with a focus on liquid water path (LWP) response to cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentrations. The LWP sensitivity to aerosol perturbation within dynamic regimes is found to exhibit a large spread among these GCMs. It is in regimes of strong large-scale ascend (?500 0.1 mm/d) contributes the most to the total aerosol indirect forcing (from 64% to nearly 100%). Results show that the uncertainty in AIE is even larger within specific dynamical regimes than that globally, pointing to the need to reduce the uncertainty in AIE in different dynamical regimes.

Revised: March 16, 2016 | Published: March 4, 2016

Citation

Zhang S., M. Wang, S.J. Ghan, A. Ding, H. Wang, K. Zhang, and D. Neubauer, et al. 2016. On the characteristics of aerosol indirect effect based on dynamic regimes in global climate models. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics 16, no. 5:2765-2783. PNNL-SA-112720. doi:10.5194/acp-16-2765-2016