On the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes

Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2018 Cloud radiative feedbacks are the largest source of uncertainty in climate projections. It has been shown that narrowing this uncertainty will require a better understanding of the two-way interactions between clouds and the atmospheric circulation. Und...

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Main Author: Wall, Casey James
Other Authors: Hartmann, Dennis L
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1773/43289
id ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/43289
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwashington:oai:digital.lib.washington.edu:1773/43289 2023-05-15T18:25:45+02:00 On the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes Wall, Casey James Hartmann, Dennis L 2018 application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1773/43289 en_US eng Wall_washington_0250E_19512.pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1773/43289 CC BY Atmospheric Dynamics Climate Change Cloud Physics Ocean-Atmosphere Interactions Tropical Convection Atmospheric sciences Thesis 2018 ftunivwashington 2023-03-12T18:59:02Z Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2018 Cloud radiative feedbacks are the largest source of uncertainty in climate projections. It has been shown that narrowing this uncertainty will require a better understanding of the two-way interactions between clouds and the atmospheric circulation. Understanding cloud-circulation interactions and constraining cloud-climate feedbacks are therefore important and urgent goals in climate research. These topics are investigated in this thesis. In Part A, satellite observations are used to study the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation over the Southern Ocean. Atmospheric motions modify the boundary-layer stratification, inversion strength, and large-scale vertical motion, and in doing so, modulate clouds. Surface heat fluxes also significantly modulate shallow clouds. The ability of climate models to simulate these processes is investigated. Climate models consistently struggle to accurately represent shallow clouds in subfreezing environments. The implications of these model biases for uncertainty in cloud-climate feedbacks is discussed. In Part B, cloud-circulation interactions are investigated over the warm and convective tropical oceans. In these regions, the average shortwave and longwave cloud radiative effects are individually large but nearly cancel at the top of the atmosphere. It has been hypothesized that this cancellation is caused by two-way interactions between clouds, atmospheric circulation, and sea surface temperature (SST). This hypothesis is investigated using a variety of satellite observations and climate model simulations. First, observations from polar-orbiting satellites are used to investigate the relationships between large-scale circulation and cloud properties. Next, a cloud-tracking algorithm is applied to geostationary satellite observations and is used to study the evolution of clouds, the ambient environment, and the underlying SST over the life cycle of convective storms. Finally, a climate model in global ... Thesis Southern Ocean University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks Southern Ocean
institution Open Polar
collection University of Washington, Seattle: ResearchWorks
op_collection_id ftunivwashington
language English
topic Atmospheric Dynamics
Climate Change
Cloud Physics
Ocean-Atmosphere Interactions
Tropical Convection
Atmospheric sciences
spellingShingle Atmospheric Dynamics
Climate Change
Cloud Physics
Ocean-Atmosphere Interactions
Tropical Convection
Atmospheric sciences
Wall, Casey James
On the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes
topic_facet Atmospheric Dynamics
Climate Change
Cloud Physics
Ocean-Atmosphere Interactions
Tropical Convection
Atmospheric sciences
description Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2018 Cloud radiative feedbacks are the largest source of uncertainty in climate projections. It has been shown that narrowing this uncertainty will require a better understanding of the two-way interactions between clouds and the atmospheric circulation. Understanding cloud-circulation interactions and constraining cloud-climate feedbacks are therefore important and urgent goals in climate research. These topics are investigated in this thesis. In Part A, satellite observations are used to study the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation over the Southern Ocean. Atmospheric motions modify the boundary-layer stratification, inversion strength, and large-scale vertical motion, and in doing so, modulate clouds. Surface heat fluxes also significantly modulate shallow clouds. The ability of climate models to simulate these processes is investigated. Climate models consistently struggle to accurately represent shallow clouds in subfreezing environments. The implications of these model biases for uncertainty in cloud-climate feedbacks is discussed. In Part B, cloud-circulation interactions are investigated over the warm and convective tropical oceans. In these regions, the average shortwave and longwave cloud radiative effects are individually large but nearly cancel at the top of the atmosphere. It has been hypothesized that this cancellation is caused by two-way interactions between clouds, atmospheric circulation, and sea surface temperature (SST). This hypothesis is investigated using a variety of satellite observations and climate model simulations. First, observations from polar-orbiting satellites are used to investigate the relationships between large-scale circulation and cloud properties. Next, a cloud-tracking algorithm is applied to geostationary satellite observations and is used to study the evolution of clouds, the ambient environment, and the underlying SST over the life cycle of convective storms. Finally, a climate model in global ...
author2 Hartmann, Dennis L
format Thesis
author Wall, Casey James
author_facet Wall, Casey James
author_sort Wall, Casey James
title On the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes
title_short On the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes
title_full On the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes
title_fullStr On the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes
title_full_unstemmed On the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes
title_sort on the interactions between clouds and atmospheric circulation in the tropics and midlatitudes
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/1773/43289
geographic Southern Ocean
geographic_facet Southern Ocean
genre Southern Ocean
genre_facet Southern Ocean
op_relation Wall_washington_0250E_19512.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/1773/43289
op_rights CC BY
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