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Dive into the research topics where P. J. Rasch is active.

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Featured researches published by P. J. Rasch.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2009

Impact of anthropogenic aerosols on Indian summer monsoon.

Chien Wang; Dongchul Kim; Annica M. L. Ekman; M. C. Barth; P. J. Rasch

Using an interactive aerosol-climate model we find that absorbing anthropogenic aerosols, whether coexisting with scattering aerosols or not, can significantly affect the Indian summer monsoon syst ...


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2012

Marine Cloud Brightening

John Latham; Keith N. Bower; T. W. Choularton; Hugh Coe; Paul Connolly; Gary Cooper; Tim Craft; Jack Foster; Alan Gadian; Lee Galbraith; Hector Iacovides; David Johnston; Brian Launder; Brian Leslie; John Meyer; Armand P. Neukermans; Bob Ormond; Ben Parkes; P. J. Rasch; John Rush; Stephen H. Salter; Tom Stevenson; Hailong Wang; Qin Wang; Robert Wood

The idea behind the marine cloud-brightening (MCB) geoengineering technique is that seeding marine stratocumulus clouds with copious quantities of roughly monodisperse sub-micrometre sea water particles might significantly enhance the cloud droplet number concentration, and thereby the cloud albedo and possibly longevity. This would produce a cooling, which general circulation model (GCM) computations suggest could—subject to satisfactory resolution of technical and scientific problems identified herein—have the capacity to balance global warming up to the carbon dioxide-doubling point. We describe herein an account of our recent research on a number of critical issues associated with MCB. This involves (i) GCM studies, which are our primary tools for evaluating globally the effectiveness of MCB, and assessing its climate impacts on rainfall amounts and distribution, and also polar sea-ice cover and thickness; (ii) high-resolution modelling of the effects of seeding on marine stratocumulus, which are required to understand the complex array of interacting processes involved in cloud brightening; (iii) microphysical modelling sensitivity studies, examining the influence of seeding amount, seed-particle salt-mass, air-mass characteristics, updraught speed and other parameters on cloud–albedo change; (iv) sea water spray-production techniques; (v) computational fluid dynamics studies of possible large-scale periodicities in Flettner rotors; and (vi) the planning of a three-stage limited-area field research experiment, with the primary objectives of technology testing and determining to what extent, if any, cloud albedo might be enhanced by seeding marine stratocumulus clouds on a spatial scale of around 100×100 km. We stress that there would be no justification for deployment of MCB unless it was clearly established that no significant adverse consequences would result. There would also need to be an international agreement firmly in favour of such action.


Science Advances | 2015

Natural aerosols explain seasonal and spatial patterns of Southern Ocean cloud albedo

Daniel T. McCoy; Susannah M. Burrows; Robert Wood; Daniel P. Grosvenor; Scott Elliott; Po-Lun Ma; P. J. Rasch; Dennis L. Hartmann

Sulfate and organic mass in sea spray explain more than half of the variability in Southern Ocean cloud droplet concentration. Atmospheric aerosols, suspended solid and liquid particles, act as nucleation sites for cloud drop formation, affecting clouds and cloud properties—ultimately influencing the cloud dynamics, lifetime, water path, and areal extent that determine the reflectivity (albedo) of clouds. The concentration Nd of droplets in clouds that influences planetary albedo is sensitive to the availability of aerosol particles on which the droplets form. Natural aerosol concentrations affect not only cloud properties themselves but also modulate the sensitivity of clouds to changes in anthropogenic aerosols. It is shown that modeled natural aerosols, principally marine biogenic primary and secondary aerosol sources, explain more than half of the spatiotemporal variability in satellite-observed Nd. Enhanced Nd is spatially correlated with regions of high chlorophyll a, and the spatiotemporal variability in Nd is found to be driven primarily by high concentrations of sulfate aerosol at lower Southern Ocean latitudes (35o to 45oS) and by organic matter in sea spray aerosol at higher latitudes (45o to 55oS). Biogenic sources are estimated to increase the summertime mean reflected solar radiation in excess of 10 W m–2 over parts of the Southern Ocean, which is comparable to the annual mean increases expected from anthropogenic aerosols over heavily polluted regions of the Northern Hemisphere.


Journal of Climate | 2008

Midlatitude Cyclone Compositing to Constrain Climate Model Behavior Using Satellite Observations

P. R. Field; Andrew Gettelman; Richard Neale; Robert Wood; P. J. Rasch; Hugh Morrison

Identical composite analysis of midlatitude cyclones over oceanic regions has been carried out on both output from the NCAR Community Atmosphere Model, version 3 (CAM3) and multisensor satellite data. By focusing on mean fields associated with a single phenomenon, the ability of the CAM3 to reproduce realistic midlatitude cyclones is critically appraised. A number of perturbations to the control model were tested against observations, including a candidate new microphysics package for the CAM. The new microphysics removes the temperature-dependent phase determination of the old scheme and introduces representations of microphysical processes to convert from one phase to another and from cloud to precipitation species. By subsampling composite cyclones based on systemwide mean strength (mean wind speed) and systemwide mean moisture the authors believe they are able to make meaningful like-with-like comparisons between observations and model output. All variations of the CAM tested overestimate the optical thickness of high-topped clouds in regions of precipitation. Over a system as a whole, the model can both over- and underestimate total high-topped cloud amounts. However, systemwide mean rainfall rates and composite structure appear to be in broad agreement with satellite estimates. When cyclone strength is taken into account, changes in moisture and rainfall rates from both satellite-derived observations and model output as a function of changes in sea surface temperature are in accordance with the Clausius– Clapeyron equation. The authors find that the proposed new microphysics package shows improvement to composite liquid water path fields and cloud amounts.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2017

Increased Ocean Heat Convergence into the High Latitudes with CO2-Doubling Enhances Polar-Amplified Warming†

Hansi K. A. Singh; P. J. Rasch; Brian E. J. Rose

We isolate the role of the ocean in polar climate change by directly evaluating how changes in ocean dynamics with quasi-equilibrium CO2 doubling impact high-latitude climate. With CO2 doubling, the ocean heat flux convergence (OHFC) shifts poleward in winter in both hemispheres. Imposing this pattern of perturbed OHFC in a global climate model results in a poleward shift in ocean-to-atmosphere turbulent heat fluxes (both sensible and latent) and sea ice retreat; the high latitudes warm, while the midlatitudes cool, thereby amplifying polar warming. Furthermore, midlatitude cooling is propagated to the polar midtroposphere on isentropic surfaces, augmenting the (positive) lapse rate feedback at high latitudes. These results highlight the key role played by the partitioning of meridional energy transport changes between the atmosphere and ocean in high-latitude climate change.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2012

Radiative Forcing of the Direct Aerosol Effect from AeroCom Phase II Simulations

Gunnar Myhre; Bjørn H. Samset; Michael Schulz; Yves Balkanski; Susanne E. Bauer; Terje K. Berntsen; Huisheng Bian; Nicolas Bellouin; Mian Chin; Thomas Diehl; Richard C. Easter; Johann Feichter; Steven J. Ghan; D. A. Hauglustaine; Trond Iversen; Stefan Kinne; A. Kirkevåg; Jean-Francois Lamarque; Guangxing Lin; Xiaohong Liu; Marianne Tronstad Lund; G. Luo; Xiaoyan Ma; T. van Noije; Joyce E. Penner; P. J. Rasch; A. Ruiz; Øyvind Seland; Ragnhild Bieltvedt Skeie; P. Stier


Geoscientific Model Development Discussions | 2011

CAM-chem: description and evaluation of interactive atmospheric chemistry in CESM

Jean-Francois Lamarque; Louisa Kent Emmons; Peter G. Hess; Douglas E. Kinnison; Simone Tilmes; Francis M. Vitt; Colette L. Heald; Elisabeth A. Holland; Peter H. Lauritzen; J. Neu; John J. Orlando; P. J. Rasch; Geoffrey S. Tyndall


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2011

Manipulating marine stratocumulus cloud amount and albedo: a process-modelling study of aerosol-cloud-precipitation interactions in response to injection of cloud condensation nuclei

Hailong Wang; P. J. Rasch; Graham Feingold


Geoscientific Model Development | 2016

Description and evaluation of a new four-mode version of the Modal Aerosol Module (MAM4) within version 5.3 of the Community Atmosphere Model

Xiaohong Liu; Po-Lun Ma; Hailong Wang; Simone Tilmes; Balwinder Singh; Richard C. Easter; Steven J. Ghan; P. J. Rasch


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2015

Evaluation of observed and modelled aerosol lifetimes using radioactive tracers of opportunity and an ensemble of 19 global models

N. I. Kristiansen; Andreas Stohl; D. Olivié; Betty Croft; O. A. Søvde; Heiko Klein; Theodoros Christoudias; Daniel Kunkel; S. J. Leadbetter; Y. H. Lee; Kai Zhang; Kostas Tsigaridis; T. Bergman; Nikolaos Evangeliou; Hailong Wang; Po-Lun Ma; Richard C. Easter; P. J. Rasch; Xiaohong Liu; G. Pitari; G. Di Genova; S. Y. Zhao; Yves Balkanski; Susanne E. Bauer; G. Faluvegi; H. Kokkola; Randall V. Martin; Jeffrey R. Pierce; Michael Schulz; Drew T. Shindell

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Hailong Wang

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Richard C. Easter

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Jean-Francois Lamarque

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Po-Lun Ma

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Robert Wood

University of Washington

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Steven J. Ghan

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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Andrew Gettelman

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Francis M. Vitt

High Altitude Observatory

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Guangxing Lin

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

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