Abstract

The effects of aerosols on cloud microphysical properties are a large source of uncertainty when assessing anthropogenic climate change. The aerosol-cloud relationship is particularly unclear in high-latitude polar regions due to a limited number of observations. Cloud liquid water path (LWP) is an important control on cloud radiative properties, particularly in the Arctic, where clouds play a central role in the surface energy budget. Therefore, understanding how aerosols may alter cloud LWP is important, especially as aerosol sources such as industry and shipping move further north in a warming Arctic. Using satellite data, this work investigates the effects of aerosols on liquid Arctic clouds over open ocean by considering the relationship between cloud droplet number concentration (Nd) and LWP, an important component of the aerosol-LWP relationship. The LWP response to Nd varies significantly across the region, with increases in LWP with Nd observed at very high latitudes in multiple satellite datasets, with this positive signal observed most strongly during the summer months. This result is in contrast to the negative response typically seen in global satellite studies and previous work on Arctic clouds showing little LWP response to aerosols. The lower tropospheric stability (LTS) was found to be the driving force behind the spatial variations in LWP response, strongly influencing the sign and magnitude of the Nd-LWP relationship, with increases in LWP in high stability environments. The influence of humidity varied depending on the stability, with little impact at low LTS but a strong influence at high. The background Nd state does not seem to dominate the LWP response, despite the non-linearities in the relationship. As the LTS is projected to decrease in a future, warmer Arctic, these results show that increases may produce lower cloud water paths, offsetting their shortwave cooling effect.

Highlights

  • 20 Some aerosols act as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), and an increase in these aerosols leads to an increase in cloud droplet number concentration (Nd)

  • The findings suggest that the lower tropospheric stability (LTS) is a dominant control in the Nd-liquid water path (LWP) relationship, which may have significant implications in a warmer, ice-free Arctic

  • We have investigated the factors which influence the Nd-LWP relationship in Arctic clouds

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Summary

Introduction

Aerosols can strongly influence the radiative properties of clouds through the modification of cloud microphysical properties. 20 Some aerosols act as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), and an increase in these aerosols leads to an increase in cloud droplet number concentration (Nd). 20 Some aerosols act as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN), and an increase in these aerosols leads to an increase in cloud droplet number concentration (Nd). For a constant cloud liquid water path (LWP), this leads to a decrease in cloud droplet radius (Twomey, 1977). These smaller droplets increase cloud albedo and lead to a shortwave cooling effect. Smaller droplets may have a larger coalescence rates, and delay the formation of precipitation (Albrecht, 1989). This leads to larger cloud LWP, which increases cloud albedo.

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