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Dirty air fosters precipitation extremes
Changes to clouds encourage drought in dry areas and torrential downpours in moist ones
Web edition : Sunday, November 13th, 2011
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This Department of Energy facility in central Oklahoma analyzed clouds over a 10-year period and found that aerosols can have an extreme effect on rainfall patterns.Scott Collis/ARM-DOE

Even clouds can suffer from inhaling air pollution, a new study finds, resulting in extreme rainfall patterns that appear to be altering climate across the globe.

Farmers, municipal water authorities and others who depend on rainfall prefer moderate, dependable precipitation. But as soot and other minute airborne particles — a class of pollutants known as aerosols — get sucked into clouds, the pollution can dramatically alter when clouds deposit rain. The discovery emerged from analyzing every one of thousands of clouds passing over federal monitoring instruments at a site in the western United States over a 10-year period, explains Zhanqing Li of the University of Maryland in College Park.

“Haze, storms, drought and flood: We found very strong evidence that they are well connected,” he said in Washington, D.C., on November 10 at the Symposium on Stratospheric Ozone and Climate Change. He and colleagues published the findings online November 13 in Nature Geoscience.

“This is the first study to clearly establish the link between aerosols, precipitation and climate,” says Renyi Zhang of Texas A&M University in College Station.

The effects Li and his colleagues saw depended not only on pollution concentrations but also on moisture levels and cloud types. In relatively low-lying clouds where the moisture is liquid in the form of tiny droplets, increasing aerosol concentration tended to suppress precipitation, especially when relative humidity was low.

In clouds, water molecules latch onto aerosols and continue to grow until they collect enough moisture and form rain. But Li and his colleagues found that if there were too many aerosols in a cloud, not much water attached to any individual aerosol. That left water droplets that were too small to fall as rain.

In taller clouds that contained a mix of moisture types — water in the lower regions but ice crystals up high, for example — adding aerosols had the opposite effect. Droplets too tiny to rain out would get carried by strong vertical winds to the top of the cloud. There the droplets froze, releasing the energy — known as latent heat — stored in liquid water.

“That extra energy acts like a stove in the upper atmosphere to fuel the cloud’s further vertical growth,” Li says. Since water prefers to stick to ice, the frozen cloud particles quickly grew to sizes too heavy to remain aloft. Those particles came down as rain in storms too heavy for the ground to efficiently absorb.

The study also “reveals unprecedented magnitudes of impacts,” says coauthor Daniel Rosenfeld of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. For instance, very dirty conditions can double the heights of clouds compared with those that develop under pristine conditions. “The probability of heavy rain is increased by 50 percent from clean to dirty conditions, whereas the chance of light rain is reduced by 50 percent,” Rosenfeld says.

Two years ago, Yun Qian of the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, Wash., and his colleagues published data from eastern China indicating that the heavy pollution there was suppressing light rains. As a result of the new study, he says his team now plans to investigate whether China’s heavy pollution will similarly affect mixed phase — water and ice — clouds in ways that might foster monster rains.

For years, studies have been showing global warming can foster more extreme weather, notes Veerabhadran Ramanathan of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego. “What this study is showing is that there may be one more factor causing the same thing — further pushing events in a direction we do not want.”


Found in: Earth and Environment

Comments 5

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  • Pakistan - 2 Floods in 18 months - 2000 dead, 4000 villages damaged
    Philippines - 2nd typhoon in a week - 55 dead, 450k+ displaced
    Colorado, USA has experienced 100mile per hour winds (160 kilometers per hour)

    Crazy Weather. Sounds like our fault.
    Wayne Johnson Wayne Johnson
    Nov. 14, 2011 at 4:02pm
  • How clouds form has been known for a long time. I learned that in 1943 when I was studying to be a meteorologist in the Army Air Force, and the knowledge was not new then. When Pittsburgh and Youngstown steel mills were emitting smoke clouds were everywhere

    r m kraus/akron
    Robert M Kraus Sr  Robert M Kraus Sr
    Nov. 15, 2011 at 10:17am
  • The previous comment is correct about this being common knowledge. My undergraduate degree taught this in the mid-eighties; the research was based on smelter locations in NE USA (Chicago, IIRC) and subsequent precipitation patterns. Amazed this has fallen out of current teaching. Someone needs to search a little harder through back issues of Monthly Weather Review (that someone being the referees of the paper).
    David Kilham David Kilham
    Nov. 17, 2011 at 10:05am
  • Looks like we need new terms.

    One term is needed for the near-surface clouds with many tiny droplets that are too light to fall as rain.

    Teaser clouds?

    The other term needed is for the tall dirty clouds in which the little droplets rise up and turn to ice and eventually become heavy enough as droplets to fall as storms.

    Dirt-bag clouds?

    Surely there are going to be some great Latin-type technical terms for these clouds!

    Joan Savage Joan Savage
    Nov. 21, 2011 at 9:41am
  • I agree that this is common knowledge. The correlation between aerosols and clouds has been known for a a very long time.
    John Murthy John Murthy
    Nov. 28, 2011 at 11:32am
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Suggested Reading :
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  • S. Perkins. Pollution in India may affect climate. Science News, Vol. 159, January 6, 2001, p. 15. Available online: [Go to]
  • J. Raloff. Pollution may be strengthening Asian cyclones. Science News Online. November 2, 2011. Available to subscribers at: [Go to]
Citations & References :
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  • Z. Li, et al. Long-term impacts of aerosols on the vertical development of clouds and precipitation. Nature Geoscience. published online November 13, 2011. doi: 10.1038/NGEO1313
  • Y. Qian, et al. Heavy pollution suppresses light rain in China: Observations and modeling. Journal of Geophysical Research, Vol. 114, August 15, 2009, p. D00K02. doi:10.1029/2008JD011575.
    Abstract: [Go to]
  • D. Rosenfeld. TRMM observed first direct evidence of smoke from forest fires inhibiting rainfall. Geophysical Research Letters. October 15, 1999, Vol. 26, 1999, p. 3105.
    Abstract: [Go to]
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