Abstract

AbstractEarth may have been globally ice‐covered at least two times during the Cryogenian Period (720–635 Ma). Previous studies showed that clouds could strongly warm a hard snowball Earth and promote its deglaciation. However, the understanding of clouds was largely based on coarse‐resolution global simulations with parameterized convection and clouds, or high‐resolution cloud‐resolving simulations with explicit convection and clouds but limited to a small domain without the effects of large‐scale circulation. Here we present the first global non‐hydrostatic high‐resolution (30 km) simulation to investigate snowball clouds and their radiative effects. We show that spatial‐temporal cloud distributions exhibit clear meanders (patterns of curved lines rather than straight lines along the west‐east direction) and strong variabilities, which result from the tight interactions among the Inter‐Tropical Convergence Zone, Hadley cells, and baroclinic instability. The net cloud radiative effect is around 20 W m−2 in the tropics, consistent with previous global general circulation model simulations.

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