The contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud–aerosol relationships

Meteorological covariation may drive relationships between aerosol and cloud-related properties. It is important to account for the meteorological contribution to observed cloud–aerosol relationships in order to improve understanding of aerosol–cloud–climate interactions. A new method of investigati...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Grandey, BS, Stier, P, Grainger, RG, Wagner, TM
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: European Geosciences Union 2013
_version_ 1826294527435997184
author Grandey, BS
Stier, P
Grainger, RG
Wagner, TM
author_facet Grandey, BS
Stier, P
Grainger, RG
Wagner, TM
author_sort Grandey, BS
collection OXFORD
description Meteorological covariation may drive relationships between aerosol and cloud-related properties. It is important to account for the meteorological contribution to observed cloud–aerosol relationships in order to improve understanding of aerosol–cloud–climate interactions. A new method of investigating the contribution of meteorological covariation to observed cloud–aerosol relationships is introduced. Other studies have investigated the contribution of local meteorology to cloud–aerosol relationships. In this paper, a complimentary large-scale view is presented. Extratropical cyclones have been previously shown to affect satellite-retrieved aerosol optical depth (τ), due to en- hanced emission of sea salt and sea surface brightness artefacts in regions of higher wind speed. Extratropical cyclones have also been shown to affect cloud-related properties such as cloud fraction (fc) and cloud top temperature (Ttop). Therefore, it seems plausible to hypothesise that extratropical cyclones may drive relationships between cloud-related properties and τ. In this paper, a description of extratropical cyclones, based on the relative vorticity of the storm and position in the storm domain, is used to analyse MODerate resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) retrieved τ, fc and Ttop data. This storm-centric description is capable of explaining fc–τrelationships, although the relationships explained represent only a small component of the relationships observed in the MODIS data. This storm-centric approach produces no statistically robust explanation for Ttop–τ relationships, suggesting that large-scale synoptic conditions in the mid-latitudes do not drive Ttop–τ relationships. The primary causes for observed cloud–aerosol relationships are likely to be other factors such as retrieval errors, local meteorology or aerosol–cloud interactions.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T03:47:02Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:bfd670bd-b960-46e2-a04c-473388e5c862
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T03:47:02Z
publishDate 2013
publisher European Geosciences Union
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:bfd670bd-b960-46e2-a04c-473388e5c8622022-03-27T05:50:27ZThe contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud–aerosol relationshipsJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:bfd670bd-b960-46e2-a04c-473388e5c862EnglishSymplectic ElementsEuropean Geosciences Union2013Grandey, BSStier, PGrainger, RGWagner, TMMeteorological covariation may drive relationships between aerosol and cloud-related properties. It is important to account for the meteorological contribution to observed cloud–aerosol relationships in order to improve understanding of aerosol–cloud–climate interactions. A new method of investigating the contribution of meteorological covariation to observed cloud–aerosol relationships is introduced. Other studies have investigated the contribution of local meteorology to cloud–aerosol relationships. In this paper, a complimentary large-scale view is presented. Extratropical cyclones have been previously shown to affect satellite-retrieved aerosol optical depth (τ), due to en- hanced emission of sea salt and sea surface brightness artefacts in regions of higher wind speed. Extratropical cyclones have also been shown to affect cloud-related properties such as cloud fraction (fc) and cloud top temperature (Ttop). Therefore, it seems plausible to hypothesise that extratropical cyclones may drive relationships between cloud-related properties and τ. In this paper, a description of extratropical cyclones, based on the relative vorticity of the storm and position in the storm domain, is used to analyse MODerate resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) retrieved τ, fc and Ttop data. This storm-centric description is capable of explaining fc–τrelationships, although the relationships explained represent only a small component of the relationships observed in the MODIS data. This storm-centric approach produces no statistically robust explanation for Ttop–τ relationships, suggesting that large-scale synoptic conditions in the mid-latitudes do not drive Ttop–τ relationships. The primary causes for observed cloud–aerosol relationships are likely to be other factors such as retrieval errors, local meteorology or aerosol–cloud interactions.
spellingShingle Grandey, BS
Stier, P
Grainger, RG
Wagner, TM
The contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud–aerosol relationships
title The contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud–aerosol relationships
title_full The contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud–aerosol relationships
title_fullStr The contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud–aerosol relationships
title_full_unstemmed The contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud–aerosol relationships
title_short The contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud–aerosol relationships
title_sort contribution of extratropical cyclones to observed cloud aerosol relationships
work_keys_str_mv AT grandeybs thecontributionofextratropicalcyclonestoobservedcloudaerosolrelationships
AT stierp thecontributionofextratropicalcyclonestoobservedcloudaerosolrelationships
AT graingerrg thecontributionofextratropicalcyclonestoobservedcloudaerosolrelationships
AT wagnertm thecontributionofextratropicalcyclonestoobservedcloudaerosolrelationships
AT grandeybs contributionofextratropicalcyclonestoobservedcloudaerosolrelationships
AT stierp contributionofextratropicalcyclonestoobservedcloudaerosolrelationships
AT graingerrg contributionofextratropicalcyclonestoobservedcloudaerosolrelationships
AT wagnertm contributionofextratropicalcyclonestoobservedcloudaerosolrelationships