*This item and others will be in the monthly “Solar Geoengineering Updates
Substack” newsletter:* https://solargeoengineeringupdates.substack.com/
-----------------------------------------------------------------

https://repository.tudelft.nl/islandora/object/uuid:6e6a40d6-8ec0-4c66-9e04-bb426f001567

Author

Maqsood, Bilal
<https://repository.tudelft.nl/islandora/search/author%3A%22Maqsood%2C%20Bilal%22>
(TU
Delft Civil Engineering & Geosciences)

Degree granting institution

Delft University of Technology

Date

2023-06-23

Abstract

Over the period 1901-2012, the average global sea surface temperature has
increased by 0.89 °C due to climate change and it is expected to increase
consistent with global warming. As a consequence, marine ecosystems have
become more susceptible to change in species and ocean chemistry. Due to
the increase in sea surface temperature, the ocean pH has decreased in all
regions. The main driver for this development is the uptake of
approximately 30% of anthropogenic carbon dioxide (CO2) by oceans (IPCC,
2014). In a warming ocean, populations of warm-water species grow and
populations of cold-water species decline. Furthermore, declines in coral
growth are observed (Poloczanska et al., 2016).

Marine cloud brightening is a proposed way to counteract climate change.
This geo-engineering technique brightens clouds by spraying aerosols in the
air which act as cloud condensation nuclei in order to form cloud droplets.
As a result, the albedo of the brightened cloud increases and more sunlight
is reflected, reducing the global mean temperature (Latham et al., 2012).
Although it is a potential way to counteract climate change, marine cloud
brightening has never been applied on a large scale. Also, little is known
about its feasibility.

We determined how physical properties of sea salt aerosols, specifically
the aerosol mean geometric radius, the aerosol number concentration and the
modal standard deviation of the initial aerosol spectrum, relate to the
albedo of the brightened cloud using a numerical cloud parcel model with
input parameters (Glassmeier et al., 2020). For six different values of the
initial aerosol mean geometric radius, the initial aerosol number
concentration and the modal standard deviation of the initial aerosol
spectrum, i.e. the variability in aerosol radius, three output variables
were generated in time and height. These output variables were the mean
radius of cloud droplets, the cloud droplet number and the relative
supersaturation. The differences caused by varying the input parameters
were interpreted for the output variables. Also, we generated the albedo
for the six different values of each input parameter mentioned.

The cloud droplet number depends on the aerosol number concentration. The
higher the number, the more cloud droplets are formed. The cloud albedo
does not depend on the initial aerosol mean geometric radius. The moment of
activation depends on the initial aerosol mean geometric radius and the
initial aerosol number concentration. The growth of the cloud droplets is
mainly driven by condensation when variability in aerosol radius is small.
The higher the initial aerosol number concentration, the higher the albedo
of the brightened cloud. When the variability in radius is bigger,
collision-coalescence occurs as the spectrum of cloud droplets consists of
bigger radii which tend to collide and coalesce. This leads to bigger and
heavier droplets which precipitate due to an increased mass, resulting in a
decrease in cloud droplet number and a decrease in cloud albedo.

To conclude, three relations between physical properties of sea salt
aerosol and the cloud albedo were found. First, the aerosol mean geometric
radius at start does not affect the cloud albedo. Secondly, we found that
the higher the aerosol number concentration, the higher the cloud albedo.
Furthermore, a higher modal standard deviation of the initial aerosol
spectrum leads to a lower cloud albedo.

We recommend further research on other types of aerosols, like organic
matter and algae, and the effect of external forcing, like wind, on cloud
brightening.

*Source: TU Delft *

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAHJsh9_rPYMH0XLe8aFhco6ce3wf9XBFm2u7DG-YUM195vw2Dw%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to