Thin clouds at about 5 km altitude are more ubiquitous in the tropics than
previously1 thought and they have a substantial cooling effect on climate. This is shown in a recent study by researchers from Stockholm University and the University of Miami published in Nature Communications. The cooling effect of mid-level clouds is currently missing in global climate models. "Using the satellite observations and high-resolution numerical modelling, we find that thin mid-level clouds are frequently formed in the tropics in the vicinity of deep convective clouds and that their cooling effect could be as large as the warming induced by high cirrus clouds", says lead author of the study Quentin
Bourgeois2, postdoctoral associate at the Department of Meteorology (MISU) and the Bolin Centre for Climate Research, Stockholm University.
Clouds play a pivotal role in determining the Earth's climate and radiation budget, yet we still have a lot to learn about them. In particular, little is known about mid-level clouds, i.e. clouds located at approximately 5 km altitude, as these clouds are challenging to study.
"To bridge our gaps in knowledge about thin mid-level clouds we used space-borne lidar instruments that provide
detailed3 information on the
vertical4 distribution of clouds", says Quentin Bourgeois.
The scientists anticipate that their study will trigger further interest in thin mid-level clouds, which have been neglected for too long. In particular, the
mechanism5 of their formation is not well understood yet. The authors also hope that the climate research community will factor in clouds in climate models more often in the future so that
projections6 of climate change will become more accurate.