TY - JOUR
T1 - East Asian Study of Tropospheric Aerosols and their Impact on Regional Clouds, Precipitation, and Climate (EAST-AIRCPC)
AU - Li, Zhanqing
AU - Wang, Yuan
AU - Guo, Jianping
AU - Zhao, Chuanfeng
AU - Cribb, Maureen C.
AU - Dong, Xiquan
AU - Fan, Jiwen
AU - Gong, Daoyi
AU - Huang, Jianping
AU - Jiang, Mengjiao
AU - Jiang, Yiquan
AU - Lee, S. S.
AU - Li, Huan
AU - Li, Jiming
AU - Liu, Jianjun
AU - Qian, Yun
AU - Rosenfeld, Daniel
AU - Shan, Siyu
AU - Sun, Yele
AU - Wang, Huijun
AU - Xin, Jinyuan
AU - Yan, Xin
AU - Yang, Xin
AU - Yang, Xiu qun
AU - Zhang, Fang
AU - Zheng, Youtong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2019. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2019/12/16
Y1 - 2019/12/16
N2 - Aerosols have significant and complex impacts on regional climate in East Asia. Cloud-aerosol-precipitation interactions (CAPI) remain most challenging in climate studies. The quantitative understanding of CAPI requires good knowledge of aerosols, ranging from their formation, composition, transport, and their radiative, hygroscopic, and microphysical properties. A comprehensive review is presented here centered on the CAPI based chiefly, but not limited to, publications in the special section named EAST-AIRcpc concerning (1) observations of aerosol loading and properties, (2) relationships between aerosols and meteorological variables affecting CAPI, (3) mechanisms behind CAPI, and (4) quantification of CAPI and their impact on climate. Heavy aerosol loading in East Asia has significant radiative effects by reducing surface radiation, increasing the air temperature, and lowering the boundary layer height. A key factor is aerosol absorption, which is particularly strong in central China. This absorption can have a wide range of impacts such as creating an imbalance of aerosol radiative forcing at the top and bottom of the atmosphere, leading to inconsistent retrievals of cloud variables from space-borne and ground-based instruments. Aerosol radiative forcing can delay or suppress the initiation and development of convective clouds whose microphysics can be further altered by the microphysical effect of aerosols. For the same cloud thickness, the likelihood of precipitation is influenced by aerosols: suppressing light rain and enhancing heavy rain, delaying but intensifying thunderstorms, and reducing the onset of isolated showers in most parts of China. Rainfall has become more inhomogeneous and more extreme in the heavily polluted urban regions.
AB - Aerosols have significant and complex impacts on regional climate in East Asia. Cloud-aerosol-precipitation interactions (CAPI) remain most challenging in climate studies. The quantitative understanding of CAPI requires good knowledge of aerosols, ranging from their formation, composition, transport, and their radiative, hygroscopic, and microphysical properties. A comprehensive review is presented here centered on the CAPI based chiefly, but not limited to, publications in the special section named EAST-AIRcpc concerning (1) observations of aerosol loading and properties, (2) relationships between aerosols and meteorological variables affecting CAPI, (3) mechanisms behind CAPI, and (4) quantification of CAPI and their impact on climate. Heavy aerosol loading in East Asia has significant radiative effects by reducing surface radiation, increasing the air temperature, and lowering the boundary layer height. A key factor is aerosol absorption, which is particularly strong in central China. This absorption can have a wide range of impacts such as creating an imbalance of aerosol radiative forcing at the top and bottom of the atmosphere, leading to inconsistent retrievals of cloud variables from space-borne and ground-based instruments. Aerosol radiative forcing can delay or suppress the initiation and development of convective clouds whose microphysics can be further altered by the microphysical effect of aerosols. For the same cloud thickness, the likelihood of precipitation is influenced by aerosols: suppressing light rain and enhancing heavy rain, delaying but intensifying thunderstorms, and reducing the onset of isolated showers in most parts of China. Rainfall has become more inhomogeneous and more extreme in the heavily polluted urban regions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85076185764&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1029/2019JD030758
DO - 10.1029/2019JD030758
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AN - SCOPUS:85076185764
SN - 2169-897X
VL - 124
SP - 13026
EP - 13054
JO - Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
JF - Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres
IS - 23
ER -