Realistic representation of mixed-phase clouds increases projected climate warming

Stefan Hofer, Lily C. Hahn, Jonah K. Shaw, Zachary S. McGraw, Olimpia Bruno, Franziska Hellmuth, Marianne Pietschnig, Idunn Aa Mostue, Robert O. David, Tim Carlsen, Trude Storelvmo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Clouds are the main source of uncertainties when projecting climate change. Mixed-phase clouds that contain ice and supercooled-liquid particles are especially hard to constrain, and climate models neither agree on their phase nor their spatial extent. This is problematic, as models that underestimate contemporary supercooled-liquid in mixed-phase clouds will underestimate future warming. Furthermore, it has recently been shown that supercooled-liquid water in mixed-phase clouds is not homogeneously-mixed, neither vertically nor horizontally. However, while there have been attempts at observationally constraining mixed-phase clouds to constrain uncertainties in future warming, all studies only use the phase of the interior of mixed-phase clouds. Here we show, using novel satellite observations that distinguish between cloud-top and interior phase in mixed-phase clouds, that mixed-phase clouds are more liquid at the cloud top globally. We use these observations to constrain the cloud top phase in addition to the interior in a global climate model, leading to +1 °C more 21st century warming in NorESM2 SSP5-8.5 climate projections. We anticipate that the difference between cloud top and interior phase in mixed-phase clouds is an important new target metric for future climate model development, because similar mixed-phase clouds related biases in future warming are likely present in many climate models.

Original languageEnglish
Article number390
JournalCommunications Earth and Environment
Volume5
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2024

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Realistic representation of mixed-phase clouds increases projected climate warming'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this