Abstract
Effective radiative forcing includes a contribution by rapid
adjustments, i.e. changes in temperature, water vapour and clouds that
modify the energy budget. Cloud adjustments in particular have been
shown to depend strongly on forcing agent. We perform idealised
atmospheric heating experiments to demonstrate a relationship between
cloud adjustment and the vertical profile of imposed radiative heating:
boundary-layer heating causes a positive cloud adjustment, while
free-tropospheric heating yields a negative adjustment. This dependence
is dominated by the shortwave effect of changes in low clouds. Much of
the variation in cloud adjustment among realistic forcing agents such as
CO2, CH4, solar forcing, and black carbon is explained by the
“characteristic altitude” of the heating profile, through its effect
on tropospheric stability.