Authors
John H Seinfeld, Christopher Bretherton, Kenneth S Carslaw, Hugh Coe, Paul J DeMott, Edward J Dunlea, Graham Feingold, Steven Ghan, Alex B Guenther, Ralph Kahn, Ian Kraucunas, Sonia M Kreidenweis, Mario J Molina, Athanasios Nenes, Joyce E Penner, Kimberly A Prather, V Ramanathan, Venkatachalam Ramaswamy, Philip J Rasch, AR Ravishankara, Daniel Rosenfeld, Graeme Stephens, Robert Wood
Publication date
2016/5/24
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
113
Issue
21
Pages
5781-5790
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The effect of an increase in atmospheric aerosol concentrations on the distribution and radiative properties of Earth’s clouds is the most uncertain component of the overall global radiative forcing from preindustrial time. General circulation models (GCMs) are the tool for predicting future climate, but the treatment of aerosols, clouds, and aerosol−cloud radiative effects carries large uncertainties that directly affect GCM predictions, such as climate sensitivity. Predictions are hampered by the large range of scales of interaction between various components that need to be captured. Observation systems (remote sensing, in situ) are increasingly being used to constrain predictions, but significant challenges exist, to some extent because of the large range of scales and the fact that the various measuring systems tend to address different scales. Fine-scale models represent clouds, aerosols, and aerosol−cloud interactions …
Total citations
201620172018201920202021202220232024637656568891109667
Scholar articles
JH Seinfeld, C Bretherton, KS Carslaw, H Coe… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016