https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.2509949122

*Authors: *Geoffrey Pugsley, Edward Gryspeerdt, and Vishnu Nair

*November 21, 2025*

https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2509949122

*Significance*
The effect of airborne particulates-called aerosols-on climate is highly
uncertain due to their complex interactions with clouds. A significant
source of this uncertainty comes from the aerosol influence on large,
low-lying clouds over the oceans, known as stratocumulus. These clouds are
known to behave differently between day and night, yet most previous
observational studies have focused on the daytime. This study shows that
the aerosol impact on stratocumulus is strongly time-dependent, with cloud
fraction changes primarily driven by nighttime processes. These results
highlight the need for more observations of nighttime cloud behavior and a
better representation of the diurnal cycle in models, particularly when
considering the impact of marine cloud brightening.

*Abstract*
Aerosol–cloud interactions remain one of the largest uncertainties in the
anthropogenic forcing of the climate; a significant contribution to this is
due to the aerosol effect on the development of cloud fraction and liquid
water path in stratocumulus clouds. Stratocumulus are strongly modulated by
the diurnal cycle, but many previous observational studies have primarily
focused on the daytime behavior of these clouds. In this work, a Lagrangian
framework is used to characterize the day-night variation in the cloud
sensitivity to aerosol. It is shown that the cloud fraction response to
aerosol is driven by nighttime processes, whereas aerosols play a lesser
role in daytime cloud fraction breakup. The liquid water path response
reveals that aerosols act to thin the cloud during the daytime; however,
this effect is partially offset by other processes during the nighttime.
These nighttime cloud processes play an important role in setting the cloud
state at the start of the day and hence the daytime cloud evolution, during
which stratocumulus clouds have the greatest radiative impact. Our findings
are consistent with an aerosol induced suppression of precipitation that
acts most effectively at night, when stratocumulus precipitation is
strongest. These results highlight a requirement for nighttime observations
of marine clouds and an improved representation of the diurnal cycle in
model-observation comparisons, especially when assessing climate forcing
and the viability of marine cloud brightening.

*Source: PNAS*

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