Clouds and climate: Climate science's greatest challenge

Cloud research is a rapidly developing branch of climate science that's vital to climate modelling. With new observational and simulation technologies our knowledge of clouds and their role in the warming climate is accelerating. This book provides a comprehensive overview of research on clouds...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Siebesma, A., Bony, S., Jakob, C., Stevens, B.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0006-A431-9
Description
Summary:Cloud research is a rapidly developing branch of climate science that's vital to climate modelling. With new observational and simulation technologies our knowledge of clouds and their role in the warming climate is accelerating. This book provides a comprehensive overview of research on clouds and their role in our present and future climate, covering theoretical, observational, and modelling perspectives. Part I discusses clouds from three different perspectives: as particles, light and fluid. Part II describes our capability to model clouds, ranging from theoretical conceptual models to applied parameterised representations. Part III describes the interaction of clouds with the large-scale circulation in the tropics, mid-latitudes, and polar regions. Part IV describes how clouds are perturbed by aerosols, the land-surface, and global warming. Each chapter contains end-of-chapter exercises and further reading sections, making this an ideal resource for advanced students and researchers in climatology, atmospheric science, meteorology, and climate change 1. Cloudy perspectives Louise Nuijens and Christian Jakob Part I. Cloud Fundamentals: 2. Clouds as fluids Bjorn Stevens and A. Pier Siebesma 3. Clouds as particles Hanna Pawlowska and Ben Shipway 4. Clouds as light Robert Pincus and Hélène Chepfer Part II. Clouds and Modelling: 5. Conceptualising clouds Stephan de Roode and Roel Neggers 6. Parameterising clouds A. Pier Siebesma and Axel Seifert 7. Evaluating clouds Christian Jakob and Jean-Louis Dufresne Part III. Clouds and Circulation: 8. Tropical and subtropical cloud systems Gilles Bellon and Sandrine Bony 9. Midlatitude cloud systems George Tselioudis and Kevin Grise 10. Arctic cloud systems Gunilla Svensson and Thorsten Mauritsen Part IV. Cloud Perturbations: 11. Clouds and aerosols Johannes Quaas and Ulrike Lohmann 12. Clouds and land Cathy Hohenegger and Christoph Schär 13. Clouds and warming Sandrine Bony and Bjorn Stevens