Sensitivity to deliberate sea salt seeding of marine clouds - Observations and model simulations

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Abstract

Sea salt seeding of marine clouds to increase their albedo is a proposed technique to counteract or slow global warming. In this study, we first investigate the susceptibility of marine clouds to sea salt injections, using observational data of cloud droplet number concentration, cloud optical depth, and liquid cloud fraction from the MODIS (Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) instruments on board the Aqua and Terra satellites. We then compare the derived susceptibility function to a corresponding estimate from the Norwegian Earth System Model (NorESM). Results compare well between simulations and observations, showing that stratocumulus regions off the west coast of the major continents along with large regions over the Pacific and the Indian Oceans are susceptible. At low and mid latitudes the signal is dominated by the cloud fraction. We then carry out geo-engineering experiments with a uniform increase over ocean of 10−9 kg mĝ̂'2 sĝ̂'1 in emissions of sea salt particles with a dry modal radius of 0.13 I1/4m, an emission strength and areal coverage much greater than proposed in earlier studies. The increased sea salt concentrations and the resulting change in marine cloud properties lead to a globally averaged forcing of ĝ̂'4.8 W mĝ̂'2 at the top of the atmosphere, more than cancelling the forcing associated with a doubling of CO2 concentrations. The forcing is large in areas found to be sensitive by using the susceptibility function, confirming its usefulness as an indicator of where to inject sea salt for maximum effect. Results also show that the effectiveness of sea salt seeding is reduced because the injected sea salt provides a large surface area for water vapor and gaseous sulphuric acid to condense on, thereby lowering the maximum supersaturation and suppressing the formation and lifetime of sulphate particles. In some areas, our simulations show an overall reduction in the CCN concentration and the number of activated cloud droplets decreases, resulting in a positive forcing. © Author(s) 2012. CC Attribution 3.0 License.

Figures

  • Fig. 1. Annually averaged susceptibility (Eq. 5) from (a) MODIS data and (b) NorESM simulations.
  • Fig. 2. (a) Liquid mean cloud fraction from MODIS data, (b) cloud-weighted susceptibility from MODIS data, (c) low cloud fraction from NorESM, (d) cloud-weighted susceptibility from NorESM simulations. All annual means. Please note that color bars differ.
  • Fig. 3. Cloud-weighted susceptibility from MODIS retrievals: (a) December, January, February mean, (b) March, April, May mean, (c) June, July, August mean, (d) September, October, November mean.
  • Fig. 4. NorESM: (a) change in TOA radiative flux (W m−2) due to aerosol-cloud interactions, (b) change in cloud liquid water path (g m−2). Both annual means.
  • Fig. 5. NorESM: cloud droplet number concentration (cm−3) after adding sea salt of a dry modal radius of 0.13 µm. Annual mean at ∼930 hPa.
  • Fig. 6. NorESM: (a) change in percent cloud supersaturation with respect to water at ∼930 hPa, (b) percent change in SO4 nucleation rate at ∼930 hPa, (c) percent change in SO4 lifetime, and (d) percent time with a decrease in column integrated CDNC. All annual means.
  • Fig. 7. Changes due to increased sea salt emissions (NorESM): (a) column integrated sea salt (g m−2), (b) column integrated cloud droplet number concentration (cm−2), and (c) effective cloud droplet radius (µm) at ∼930 hPa. All annual means.
  • Fig. 8. Zonally averaged changes in (NorESM): (a) sea salt mass concentration (kg m−3), (b) aerosol number concentration (cm−3), (c) cloud droplet number concentration (cm−3), and (d) effective cloud droplet radius (µm). All annual means.

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Alterskjær, K., Kristjánsson, J. E., & Seland, O. (2012). Sensitivity to deliberate sea salt seeding of marine clouds - Observations and model simulations. Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, 12(5), 2795–2807. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-12-2795-2012

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