https://essopenarchive.org/doi/full/10.22541/essoar.175579033.31203983/v1

*Authors*
Sarah J. Doherty, Michael S Diamond, Robert Wood, Haruki Hirasawa

*21 August 2025*

*Abstract*
Solar radiation modification (SRM) is increasingly recommended for research
by scientists and official bodies as a potential option for addressing
climate risks while atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations are reduced
to safer levels. However, understanding about the potential efficacy,
impacts, benefits and risks of different SRM approaches remains limited.
Current knowledge almost exclusively stems from observation of natural
analogues and from model simulations, with the former of limited direct
applicability to SRM and the accuracy of the latter difficult to assess
without testing against real-world observations. As such, it is generally
acknowledged that well-designed field studies with controlled aerosol
emissions would provide more robust assessment of SRM approaches. Herein we
propose a framework for defining different scales of SRM field studies
based on the studies’ spatial extent and duration, and the atmospheric
energy perturbation they produce. We apply this framework to the proposed
SRM intervention of marine cloud brightening (MCB), which would involve the
targeted emission of sea salt to increase the reflectivity of oceanic
clouds, and show how different scientific goals correspond to different
study scales. A benefit of the proposed framework is that the study scales
map well to existing analogues, which can thus provide observational
estimates of the magnitude of physical impacts of different study scales
and the detectability of different metrics of interest. While we focus
primarily on this framing within the context of the physical science
aspects of field studies, we note the utility of this framework in the
context of the governance of such studies.

*Source: ESS Open Archive*

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