Abstract

Abstract. A simple heuristic model is described to assess the potential for increasing solar reflection by augmenting the aerosol population below marine low clouds, which nominally leads to increased cloud droplet concentration and albedo. The model estimates the collective impact of many point source particle sprayers, each of which generates a plume of injected particles that affects clouds over a limited area. A look-up table derived from simulations of an explicit aerosol activation scheme is used to derive cloud droplet concentration as a function of the sub-cloud aerosol size distribution and updraft speed, and a modified version of Twomey's formulation is used to estimate radiative forcing. Plume overlap is accounted for using a Poisson distribution, assuming idealized elongated cuboid plumes that have a length driven by aerosol lifetime and wind speed, a width consistent with satellite observations of ship track broadening, and a depth equal to an assumed boundary layer depth. The model is found to perform favorably against estimates of brightening from large eddy simulation studies that explicitly model cloud responses to aerosol injections over a range of conditions. Although the heuristic model does not account for cloud condensate or coverage adjustments to aerosol, in most realistic ambient remote marine conditions these tend to augment the Twomey effect in the large eddy simulations, with the result being a modest underprediction of brightening in the heuristic model. The heuristic model is used to evaluate the potential for global radiative forcing from marine cloud brightening as a function of the quantity, size, and lifetime of salt particles injected per sprayer and the number of sprayers deployed. Radiative forcing is sensitive to both the background aerosol size distribution in the marine boundary layer into which particles are injected and the assumed updraft speed. Given representative values from the literature, radiative forcing sufficient to offset a doubling of carbon dioxide ΔF2×CO2 is possible but would require spraying 50 % or more of the ocean area. This is likely to require at least 104 sprayers to avoid major losses of particles due to near-sprayer coagulation. The optimal dry diameter of injected particles, for a given salt mass injection rate, is 30–60 nm. A major consequence is that the total salt emission rate (50–70 Tg yr−1) required to offset ΔF2×CO2 is a factor of five lower than the emissions rates required to generate significant forcing in previous studies with climate models, which have mostly assumed dry diameters for injected particles in excess of 200 nm. With the lower required emissions, the salt mass loading in the marine boundary layer for ΔF2×CO2 is dominated by natural salt aerosol, with injected particles only contributing ∼ 10 %. When using particle sizes optimized for cloud brightening, the aerosol direct radiative forcing is shown to make a minimal contribution to the overall radiative forcing.

Highlights

  • Marine low clouds reflect solar radiation and cool the Earth as a result (Hartmann and Short, 1980; Ramanathan et al, 1989)

  • There is significant variability in the composition of marine cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), studies tend to find that the accumulation-mode aerosol in the unpolluted marine boundary layer (MBL) consists of a mixture of sulfate, sea salt, and organic species

  • Including an additional coarse mode with modal diameter 500 nm, geometric standard deviation (GSD) of 1.8, and concentration of 10 cm−3, which we found represents a fairly good match to the size distributions shown in J13, made less than a 10 % difference in the radiative forcing predicted by the heuristic model

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Marine low clouds reflect solar radiation and cool the Earth as a result (Hartmann and Short, 1980; Ramanathan et al, 1989). The radiative forcing would need to be somewhat stronger for MCB to offset a significant fraction of the radiative forcing from increased greenhouse gases, the lack of major canceling cloud adjustments points to the potential for regional albedo enhancement using MCB In this case, the aerosols (from ship emissions) were inadvertently brightening clouds; aerosols of a size and concentration that target intentional cloud brightening would very likely have a larger impact on cloud albedo and radiative forcing. This study describes a simple heuristic model that predicts the global radiative forcing from MCB using physical principles to determine the collective impact of plumes from many point source sprayers distributed over the oceans on Nd and cloud albedo.

Radiative forcing from aerosol-cloud interactions
Regions where sprayers operate
Expression for global radiative forcing associated with MCB
Overlapping tracks
Aerosol activation and physical and chemical properties
Aerosol direct radiative forcing
Comparison of heuristic model with large eddy simulations
Global forcing estimates from the heuristic model
Sprayer number and injection rate
Sensitivity to updraft speed
Direct radiative forcing
Implications for future work to test marine cloud brightening
Sprayer development considerations
Climate modeling
Challenges for LES modeling
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call