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Quantifying the cooling effect of tropical cyclone clouds on the climate system

Liang Hu, Elizabeth A. Ritchie, J. Scott Tyo

2023npj Climate and Atmospheric Science11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The net effect on the upwelling radiation caused by tropical cyclone clouds is calculated over a 20-year global data set, and the corresponding contribution to the earth energy balance is analyzed. Tropical cyclone clouds are shown on average to increase the upwelling radiation at the top of the atmosphere compared with the background non-tropical-cyclone-cloud climatology. This increase in upwelling radiation provides an overall cooling effect on the climate system because the increased reflected shortwave radiation (cooling) outweighs the decreased emitted longwave radiation (warming). While the effect neglects the (likely considerable) contribution due to tropical cyclone drying, the amount of cooling by clouds alone represents a considerable fraction of the excess warming energy in the climate system. Thus, any future change in tropical cyclone activity has the potential to impact the overall energy balance if it substantially alters this total. The seasonal and geographic distribution of warming and cooling effects, and the diurnal dynamics that impact whether any particular cyclone is net cooling or net warming are discussed in this study.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental scienceTropical cycloneShortwave radiationClimatologyUpwellingAtmospheric sciencesShortwaveEarth's energy budgetClimate changeGlobal warmingLongwaveCloud coverCyclone (programming language)Climate modelRadiationCloud computingOceanographyGeologyRadiative transferPhysicsComputer hardwareField-programmable gate arrayComputer scienceOperating systemQuantum mechanicsTropical and Extratropical Cyclones ResearchClimate variability and modelsMeteorological Phenomena and Simulations
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