Poster's note : a fascinating result which could affect existing
geoengineering proposals as well as sparking new ones

http://www.pnl.gov/science/highlights/highlight.asp?groupid=749&id=3717

Atmospheric Sciences & Global Change Division
Research Highlights

July 2014

Dust Increases Cloud CoverScientists find an unexpected culprit encouraging
cloud formation

The satellite image shows western Africa, where dust storms carry particles
across the Atlantic Ocean and into the atmosphere. The inset graph (enlarge
image) shows the inter-annual correlation between the June-July-August mean
dust burden and lower tropospheric cloud fraction anomalies simulated by
the model over the tropical/subtropical Atlantic Ocean.Satellite image
courtesy of NASA.Enlarge Image.

Results: Surprisingly, cloud cover increases when more dust blows off the
west coast of Africa, according to a long global climate simulation run by
researchers from the University of California San Diego and Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory. They expected that heat radiating off of
dust, which absorbs solar energy, would "burn off" the clouds. Instead, the
team found more clouds as more dust flows from Africa over the Atlantic
Ocean. The Community Earth System Model (CESM)produced the simulations in
this research.

"In our simulations, we see that above the clouds, the heat given off by
dust makes the atmosphere more stable which, in turn, reduces air mixing
between the clouds below and the much drier air above the clouds," said the
paper's co-author Dr. Steven J. Ghan, Laboratory Fellow and atmospheric
scientist at PNNL. "By reducing that mixing, more of the water evaporating
from the ocean can produce clouds."

Why It Matters: Global climate models are necessary to provide a view of
the future effects of increased atmospheric carbon dioxide. Distinguishing
the climate impact of carbon dioxide from natural variations in the climate
becomes important to understand what triggers these natural variations.
Shifting wind and precipitation patterns are natural influences that
provoke dust lofted in the air from Africa. The impacts of dust on clouds
were previously unknown, yet appear to be an important factor in altering
the Earth's energy balance for years. This research is part of the effort
to describe and understand naturally occurring background climate changes.
By simulating the effects of dust over North Africa without the effects of
emissions from human activity, such as coal-burning power plants, they can
isolate a view of this natural event to understand the full impact of dust
as it influences cloud formation.

Methods: The researchers used various observation data such as dust and
dust sources, cloud cover and composition, and aerosol optical depth from
ground and satellite information for their study. They ran a CESM
simulation for 150 years under pre-industrial conditions, i.e., without
emissions caused by human activity to view the climate interactions
isolated from human influence.

They then examined the cloud-aerosol relationships on a year-to-year
timescale. The research found a strong cloud cover enhancement below plumes
of dust transported from Africa. They identified the driving mechanism of
this increase as a suppression of vertical mixing due to dust absorbing
sunlight.

What's Next? The scientists are investigating the climatic signature of
natural variations in other aerosol particle types, such as sea salt and
wildfire smoke.

Acknowledgments

Sponsor: Development of the CESM and the research for this paper was
partially funded by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science
Biological and Environmental Research program for the Earth System Modeling
Program.

Research Team: Michael J. DeFlorio, Arthur J. Miller, Daniel R. Cayan, Lynn
M. Russell, and Richard C. J. Somerville of University of California San
Diego; and Steven J. Ghan and Balwinder Singh  of PNNL.

Research Area: Climate & Earth Systems Science

Reference: DeFlorio MJ, SJ Ghan, B Singh, AJ Miller, DR Cayan, LM Russell,
and RCJ Somerville. 2014. "Semi-Direct Dynamical and Radiative Impact of
North African Dust Transport on Lower Tropospheric Clouds over the
Subtropical North Atlantic in CESM 1.0." Journal of Geophysical Research,
early view July 2014. DOI: 10.1002/2013JD020997.

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