Dependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosol

Anthropogenic aerosol interacts strongly with incoming solar radiation, perturbing Earth’s energy budget and precipitation on both local and global scales. Understanding these changes in precipitation has proven particularly difficult for the case of absorbing aerosol, which absorbs a significant am...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Williams, A, Watson-Parris, D, Dagan, G, Stier, P
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: American Meteorological Society 2023
_version_ 1826310918772883456
author Williams, A
Watson-Parris, D
Dagan, G
Stier, P
author_facet Williams, A
Watson-Parris, D
Dagan, G
Stier, P
author_sort Williams, A
collection OXFORD
description Anthropogenic aerosol interacts strongly with incoming solar radiation, perturbing Earth’s energy budget and precipitation on both local and global scales. Understanding these changes in precipitation has proven particularly difficult for the case of absorbing aerosol, which absorbs a significant amount of incoming solar radiation and hence acts as a source of localized diabatic heating to the atmosphere. In this work, we use an ensemble of atmosphere-only climate model simulations forced by identical absorbing aerosol perturbations in different geographical locations across the globe to develop a basic physical understanding of how this localized heating impacts the atmosphere and how these changes impact on precipitation both globally and locally. In agreement with previous studies we find that absorbing aerosol causes a decrease in global-mean precipitation, but we also show that even for identical aerosol optical depth perturbations, the global-mean precipitation change varies by over an order of magnitude depending on the location of the aerosol burden. Our experiments also demonstrate that the local precipitation response to absorbing aerosol is opposite in sign between the tropics and the extratropics, as found by previous work. We then show that this contrasting response can be understood in terms of different mechanisms by which the large-scale circulation responds to heating in the extratropics and in the tropics. We provide a simple theory to explain variations in the local precipitation response to absorbing aerosol in the tropics. Our work highlights that the spatial pattern of absorbing aerosol and its interactions with circulation are a key determinant of its overall climate impact and must be taken into account when developing our understanding of aerosol–climate interactions.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:00:37Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:8445da4d-1437-45f3-a044-6e55d611ad6d
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T08:00:37Z
publishDate 2023
publisher American Meteorological Society
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:8445da4d-1437-45f3-a044-6e55d611ad6d2023-09-25T15:37:51ZDependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosolJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:8445da4d-1437-45f3-a044-6e55d611ad6dEnglishSymplectic ElementsAmerican Meteorological Society2023Williams, AWatson-Parris, DDagan, GStier, PAnthropogenic aerosol interacts strongly with incoming solar radiation, perturbing Earth’s energy budget and precipitation on both local and global scales. Understanding these changes in precipitation has proven particularly difficult for the case of absorbing aerosol, which absorbs a significant amount of incoming solar radiation and hence acts as a source of localized diabatic heating to the atmosphere. In this work, we use an ensemble of atmosphere-only climate model simulations forced by identical absorbing aerosol perturbations in different geographical locations across the globe to develop a basic physical understanding of how this localized heating impacts the atmosphere and how these changes impact on precipitation both globally and locally. In agreement with previous studies we find that absorbing aerosol causes a decrease in global-mean precipitation, but we also show that even for identical aerosol optical depth perturbations, the global-mean precipitation change varies by over an order of magnitude depending on the location of the aerosol burden. Our experiments also demonstrate that the local precipitation response to absorbing aerosol is opposite in sign between the tropics and the extratropics, as found by previous work. We then show that this contrasting response can be understood in terms of different mechanisms by which the large-scale circulation responds to heating in the extratropics and in the tropics. We provide a simple theory to explain variations in the local precipitation response to absorbing aerosol in the tropics. Our work highlights that the spatial pattern of absorbing aerosol and its interactions with circulation are a key determinant of its overall climate impact and must be taken into account when developing our understanding of aerosol–climate interactions.
spellingShingle Williams, A
Watson-Parris, D
Dagan, G
Stier, P
Dependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosol
title Dependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosol
title_full Dependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosol
title_fullStr Dependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosol
title_full_unstemmed Dependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosol
title_short Dependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosol
title_sort dependence of fast changes in global and local precipitation on the geographical location of absorbing aerosol
work_keys_str_mv AT williamsa dependenceoffastchangesinglobalandlocalprecipitationonthegeographicallocationofabsorbingaerosol
AT watsonparrisd dependenceoffastchangesinglobalandlocalprecipitationonthegeographicallocationofabsorbingaerosol
AT dagang dependenceoffastchangesinglobalandlocalprecipitationonthegeographicallocationofabsorbingaerosol
AT stierp dependenceoffastchangesinglobalandlocalprecipitationonthegeographicallocationofabsorbingaerosol