Scientists accurately model the action of aerosols on clouds

09 Mar 2018

1

Though aerosols, for several years, have been known to affect the ozone layer, it is only now that an international group including researchers from the Advanced Institute for Computational Science (AICS) in Japan, using the powerful K computer, have for the first time accurately calculated the effects of aerosols on clouds in a climate model.

Aerosols play a key role in cloud formation, as they provide the "seeds" - called cloud condensation nuclei - that allow clouds to form and affect their lifecycle. The water in the air condenses onto the tiny particles, and gradually grow into droplets and finally into raindrops that precipitate.

The action of aerosols is an important element of research on climate change, as they partially counteract the heating action of greenhouse gases.

It was previously believed that increasing aerosol density would always lead to more clouds, but recent satellite observations showed that this is not necessarily true. It is now understood that, due to temperature differences between the top and bottom layers of clouds, there is a delicate balance of evaporation and condensation, with aerosols in the lower parts of the clouds promoting cloud formation, but those in the upper parts allowing the water to evaporate.

Previously, climate models were unable to model the response of these micro-processes within the clouds to aerosol variation, but using the K computer, the RIKEN-led group combined a model that simulates the entire global weather over a year, at a horizontal resolution of just 14 kilometers, with a simulation of how the aerosols behave within clouds.

Unlike conventional models, which show a uniform increase in clouds over the earth when there is an increase in aerosols, the high-resolution model, which takes into account the vertical processes inside clouds, accurately depicted how large areas experience a drop in cloud cover.

Global climate is a tremendously complex phenomenon, and researchers are making painstaking progress, year by year, to try to develop ever more accurate models. 

According to Yosuke Sato from the Computational Climate Science Research Team at RIKEN AICS and Nagoya University, "It was very gratifying to see that we could use a powerful supercomputer to accurately model the microphysics of clouds, giving a more accurate picture of how clouds and aerosol behave in the real world. In the future, we hope to use even more powerful computers to allow climate models to have more certainty in climate prediction."

Latest articles

The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute

The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute

Silver jumps nearly Rs 7,000/kg; gold rises Rs 1,600 as weak US retail data boosts rate-cut bets

Silver jumps nearly Rs 7,000/kg; gold rises Rs 1,600 as weak US retail data boosts rate-cut bets

Goldman Sachs doubles down on India, climbs Wall Street rankings in crowded deal market

Goldman Sachs doubles down on India, climbs Wall Street rankings in crowded deal market

Rahul Gandhi criticises India–US trade deal as tariffs on Indian goods rise to 18%

Rahul Gandhi criticises India–US trade deal as tariffs on Indian goods rise to 18%

MPS Board Member and Senior Treasury Official Resigns Amid Insider Trading Probe

MPS Board Member and Senior Treasury Official Resigns Amid Insider Trading Probe

Eutelsat Secures €1 Billion Financing for OneWeb Satellite Procurement

Eutelsat Secures €1 Billion Financing for OneWeb Satellite Procurement

Tencent, Tesla Team Up on WeChat-Linked In-Car Features in China

Tencent, Tesla Team Up on WeChat-Linked In-Car Features in China

Australia presses Roblox over child safety concerns, regulator signals possible fines

Australia presses Roblox over child safety concerns, regulator signals possible fines

Cisco Unveils AI Networking Chip to Strengthen Position in Data Centre Boom

Cisco Unveils AI Networking Chip to Strengthen Position in Data Centre Boom