Sea surface temperature control on the aerosol-induced brightness of
marine clouds over the North Atlantic Ocean
Abstract
Marine low clouds are one of the greatest sources of uncertainty for
climate projection. We present an observed climatology of cloud albedo
susceptibility to cloud droplet number concentration perturbations
(S0) with changing sea surface temperature (SST)
and estimated inversion strength for single-layer warm clouds over the
North Atlantic Ocean, using eight years of satellite and reanalysis
data. The key findings are that SST has a dominant control on
S0 in the presence of co-varying synoptic
conditions and aerosol perturbations. Regions conducive to
aerosol-induced darkening (brightening) clouds occur with high (low)
local SST. Higher SST significantly hastens cloud-top evaporation with
increasing aerosol loading, by accelerating entrainment and facilitating
entrainment drying. In a global-warming-like scenario, cloud darkening
is expected, mainly as a result of increased entrainment drying via
Clausius-Clapeyron scaling. Our results imply a more (less) positive
low-cloud liquid water path feedback in a warmer climate with increasing
(decreasing) aerosol loading.