Abstract
Abstract. In eastern China (EC), the strong anthropogenic emissions deteriorate the atmospheric environment, building a south–north zonal distribution of high aerosols harbored by the upstream Tibetan and Loess plateaus in China. This study climatologically analyzed the interannual variability in precipitation with different intensities in association with aerosol variations over the EC region from 1961 to 2010 by using precipitation and visibility data from more than 50 years and aircraft and surface aerosol data from recent years in China, and the impacts of aerosol variations on interannual variability in the intensity of precipitation events and their physical causes are investigated. We found that the frequency of light rain has significantly decreased and the occurrence of rainstorms, especially severe rainstorms, has significantly increased over recent decades. The extreme precipitation events presented an interannual variability pattern similar to that of the frequent haze events over EC. Accompanied by the frequent haze events in EC, light rain frequency significantly decreased and extremely heavy precipitation events have occurred more frequently. During the 1980s, the regional precipitation trends in EC showed an obvious transform from more light rain to more extreme rainstorms. The running correlation analysis of interdecadal variation further verified that the correlation between the increasing aerosols and frequencies of abnormal precipitation events tended to be more significant in EC. The correlation between atmospheric visibility and low cloud amounts, which are both closely related to aerosol concentrations, was positive in the north and negative in the south, and the spatial distribution of the variability in regional rainstorm frequency was positive in the south and negative in the north. After the 1990s, the visibility in summer season deteriorated more remarkably, light rain frequency decreased noticeably, and rainstorms and extraordinarily heavy rainfall occurred more frequently. There were significant differences in the interdecadal variation trends in light rain and rainstorm events between the highly aerosol-polluted area in EC and the relatively clean area on the western plateaus of China. The aircraft measurements over EC confirmed that the diameters of cloud droplets decreased under high aerosol concentration conditions, thereby inhibiting weak precipitation process.
Highlights
In the context of global warming, regional precipitation tends to have more complex temporal and spatial distribution patterns
Xu et al.: Are precipitation anomalies associated with aerosol variations over eastern China?
Most previous investigations of aerosol impacts on clouds and precipitation are primarily based on limited cases on relatively small spatial and temporal scales
Summary
In the context of global warming, regional precipitation tends to have more complex temporal and spatial distribution patterns. Light rain tended to decrease and at the same time the extremely heavy precipitation tended to increase in EC (Choi et al, 2008; Qian et al, 2007, 2009) This phenomenon might be evidence of climate variability connected to global warming together with increased emissions of anthropogenic aerosols. In order to analyze the regional variations in aerosols over EC, we adopt the equivalent visibility by excluding the influence of natural factors (Rosenfeld et al, 2007) on the observed visibility based on the meteorological data in 1961– 2010. The vertical changes in aerosol and cloud droplet size were comprehensively analyzed based on the aerosol–cloud data observed from aircraft flights over Beijing and its surrounding regions during 2008–2010. The data were processed into two or more samples when the clouds were multiply layered
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