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Abstract: Sensitivities of Arctic Clouds to Climate Change (21st C…nic Fluid Dynamics and the 19th Conference on Middle

Atmosphere ) 3/12/18, 9)01 PM

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Abstract: Sensitivities of Arctic Clouds to Climate Change (21st C…nic Fluid Dynamics and the 19th Conference on Middle Atmosphere ) 3/12/18, 9)01 PM

Start 6.4 Sensitivities of Arctic Clouds to Climate Change


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Award Winners Xiyue Zhang, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA; and T. Schneider,
K. G. Pressel, and C. M. Kaul
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The Arctic has been experiencing rapid changes in recent decades. In addition
to the prominent sea ice loss, Arctic amplification is a robust feature in climate
models under greenhouse warming and has also been observed over the past
decades. Cloud feedbacks and the trapping of heat under the stable inversion
are thought to contribute to this Arctic amplification of global warming.
However, the sign of any cloud feedback in high latitudes is uncertain.

Understanding and constraining Arctic cloud feedback is difficult because of


the ubiquitous temperature inversion in high latitudes and the presence of
mixed-phase clouds, both of which are challenging to capture in global
climate models (GCMs). Here we use high-resolution large-eddy simulations
(LES) with a one-moment mixed-phase microphysics scheme to investigate
how Arctic clouds respond to climate changes. To represent changing large-
scale conditions such as meridional moisture advection in a realizable way, we
drive the LES with output from a GCM: temperature and moisture tendencies
from a grid cell at 82N are used as forcing terms in the LES.

We find that low-cloud fraction decreases with increasing temperature across


a wide range of climates. The cloud fraction changes are associated with a
change in cloud regimes from stratocumulus in the coldest climate, to cumulus
in the warmest climate. This can be understood from changes in the saturation
deficit, the difference between specific humidity and saturation specific
humidity, which increases with temperature because relative humidity changes
in the boundary layer are modest. We also investigate the relationship
between lower-tropospheric stability and cloud fraction. A sensitivity
experiment that uniformly increases temperature in an atmospheric columns
shows that decreased cloud fraction can be associated with increased lower
tropospheric stability, contrary to common beliefs. Implications for cloud
feedbacks in the Arctic are discussed.

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See more of: Coupling Between Moisture, Clouds, and Circulation -Part II
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