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Natural aerosols explain seasonal and spatial patterns of Southern Ocean cloud albedo

Science Advances, ISSN: 2375-2548, Vol: 1, Issue: 6, Page: e1500157
2015
  • 163
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 289
    Captures
  • 20
    Mentions
  • 95
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    163
  • Captures
    289
  • Mentions
    20
    • News Mentions
      12
      • 12
    • Blog Mentions
      8
      • 8
  • Social Media
    95
    • Shares, Likes & Comments
      95
      • Facebook
        95

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Article Description

Atmospheric aerosols, suspended solid and liquid particles, act as nucleation sites for cloud drop formation, affecting clouds and cloud properties-ultimately influencing the cloud dynamics, lifetime, water path, and areal extent that determine the reflectivity (albedo) of clouds. The concentration N of droplets in clouds that influences planetary albedo is sensitive to the availability of aerosol particles on which the droplets form. Natural aerosol concentrations affect not only cloud properties themselves but also modulate the sensitivity of clouds to changes in anthropogenic aerosols. It is shown that modeled natural aerosols, principally marine biogenic primary and secondary aerosol sources, explain more than half of the spatiotemporal variability in satellite-observed N. Enhanced N is spatially correlated with regions of high chlorophyll a, and the spatiotemporal variability in Nd is found to be driven primarily by high concentrations of sulfate aerosol at lower Southern Ocean latitudes (35° to 45°S) and by organic matter in sea spray aerosol at higher latitudes (45° to 55°S). Biogenic sources are estimated to increase the summertime mean reflected solar radiation in excess of 10 W m over parts of the Southern Ocean, which is comparable to the annual mean increases expected from anthropogenic aerosols over heavily polluted regions of the Northern Hemisphere.

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