Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Jun 2024)

Present-day correlations are insufficient to predict cloud albedo change by anthropogenic aerosols in E3SM v2

  • N. Mahfouz,
  • J. Mülmenstädt,
  • S. Burrows

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-24-7253-2024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24
pp. 7253 – 7260

Abstract

Read online

Cloud albedo susceptibility to droplet number perturbation remains a source of uncertainty in understanding aerosol–cloud interactions and thus both past and present climate states. Through the Energy Exascale Earth System Model (E3SM) v2 experiments, we probe the effects of competing processes on cloud albedo susceptibility of low-lying marine stratocumulus in the northeast Pacific. In present-day conditions, we find that increasing precipitation suppression by aerosols increases cloud albedo susceptibility, whereas increasing cloud sedimentation decreases it. By constructing a hypothetical model configuration exhibiting negative susceptibility under all conditions, we conclude that cloud albedo change due to aerosol perturbation cannot be predicted by present-day co-variabilities in E3SM v2. As such, our null result herein challenges the assumption that present-day climate observations are sufficient to constrain past states, at least in the context of cloud albedo changes to aerosol perturbation.