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John Latham
lat...@ucar.edu & john.l...@manchester.ac.uk
Tel. 303-444-2429 (H) & 303-497-8182 (W)
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On Dec 16, 12:02 pm, John Latham <john.latha...@manchester.ac.uk>
wrote:
> Hello Mike et al,
>
> I agree entirely with you Mike that seeding can cause ice fogs to disperse. Also electrostatic droplet seeding could help dissipate warm fogs. I should have more carefully indicated that I was focusing on seeding of clouds containing ice, and particularly mixed-phase clouds.
>
> Cheers, John.
>
> Quoting Mike MacCracken <mmacc...@comcast.net>:
>
>
>
>
>
> > With one exception, I agree with John. The exception is that I think it has
> > been demonstrated that one can clear an ice fog with seeding, and this has
> > been done to open airports, etc.--not to generate precipitation (in any
> > form).
>
> > I would add that the water vapor content of air and clouds above Greenland
> > is likely so low that one could not be likely to get a significant buildup
> > of snow. Whether one could seed storms or change sea surface temperatures in
> > surrounding areas in a way that would lead to greater likelihood of storms
> > depositing snow on Greenland (or Antarctica, etc.) has not, to my knowledge,
> > been looked at at all.
>
> > Mike
>
> lat...@ucar.edu & john.latha...@manchester.ac.uk
>
> Tel. 303-444-2429 (H) & 303-497-8182 (W)- Hide quoted text -
> > - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -
Hi John,My albedo flip of 0.23 was based on the mean summer albedo of sea ice. It is not covered with snow for 2 of the 3 months of summer, even in preindustrial times (from the climate models - this is because colder winters actually mean less water transport and less snow. Even through summer temperatures are colder, less snow needs to be melted before the ice is bare).Clearly albedo only matters in the summer. We have just done some experiments with black carbon on snow and found that this increases global temperatures by about 0.5C through earlier melt of snow cover (similar experiments have been done by NCAR in the US)..CheersJeff
Thanks, Jeff. That's most helpful.
From: John Nissen [mailto:j...@cloudworld.co.uk]
Sent: Thursday, December 17, 2009 12:36 PM
To: Ridley, Jeff
Subject: Re: [geo] Re: cloud seeding - need for research - ja
I expect there will be some follow up questions, and I'd be grateful if you could respond to them.
BTW, in one of my emails I gave estimates of the contribution to global warming from albedo flip, from pre-industrial to complete sea ice disappearance, as between 0.2 and 0.8 Watts per square metre. Your estimate had come out 0.25, and mine 0.75. The main difference arose because of uncertainty in the degree of albedo change: you had taken 0.23 and I'd taken 0.70, if I remember correctly. The context of the calculation was over requirements for solar radiation management (SRM) to halt sea ice retreat. Added uncertainty in the calculation arose from the clouds, but if they reduce the albedo flip (so requiring less SRM to counter), they also reduce the effectiveness of SRM correspondingly . I wonder whether black carbon was crucial for our calculations - because if there is a significant amount, it reduces the albedo flip. Is this why you took 0.23 for the albedo change? I was assuming pristine snow pre-industrial!
Cheers,
John
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Ridley, Jeff wrote:Hi John,Global cloud cover is expected to decrease with increase in CO2. The decrease is in the tropics. This occurs because increasing CO2 leads to a warming of the middle troposphere, where the greenhouse gases absorb the outgoing radiation, and this stabilises the atmosphere against convection. Thus, although the surface temperatures are warming, a tendency to increase convection, the tropospheric warming is countering it and less clouds form. Low cloud such as that in the polar regions is expected to increase (as confirmed by observations in the Arctic).As you point out, increased cloud in the Arctic reduces summer melt but leads to a warming in all other seasons. In models it is this winter warming that is responsible for the long term decline in sea ice volume. With more downward long wave the ice does not thicken so much in winter, preconditioning it for an earlier melt in summer.RegardsJeff
From: John Nissen [mailto:j...@cloudworld.co.uk]
Sent: Wednesday, December 16, 2009 7:13 PM
To: john.l...@manchester.ac.uk
Cc: Mike MacCracken; Neil Farbstein; Andrew Lockley; Geoengineering; Ridley, Jeff
Subject: Re: [geo] Re: cloud seeding - need for research - ja