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      Low clouds suppress Arctic air formation and amplify high-latitude continental winter warming.

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          Abstract

          High-latitude continents have warmed much more rapidly in recent decades than the rest of the globe, especially in winter, and the maintenance of warm, frost-free conditions in continental interiors in winter has been a long-standing problem of past equable climates. We use an idealized single-column atmospheric model across a range of conditions to study the polar night process of air mass transformation from high-latitude maritime air, with a prescribed initial temperature profile, to much colder high-latitude continental air. We find that a low-cloud feedback--consisting of a robust increase in the duration of optically thick liquid clouds with warming of the initial state--slows radiative cooling of the surface and amplifies continental warming. This low-cloud feedback increases the continental surface air temperature by roughly two degrees for each degree increase of the initial maritime surface air temperature, effectively suppressing Arctic air formation. The time it takes for the surface air temperature to drop below freezing increases nonlinearly to ∼ 10 d for initial maritime surface air temperatures of 20 °C. These results, supplemented by an analysis of Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 5 climate model runs that shows large increases in cloud water path and surface cloud longwave forcing in warmer climates, suggest that the "lapse rate feedback" in simulations of anthropogenic climate change may be related to the influence of low clouds on the stratification of the lower troposphere. The results also indicate that optically thick stratus cloud decks could help to maintain frost-free winter continental interiors in equable climates.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A.
          Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
          Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
          1091-6490
          0027-8424
          Sep 15 2015
          : 112
          : 37
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138; timothywcronin@fas.harvard.edu.
          [2 ] Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138; School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138.
          Article
          1510937112
          10.1073/pnas.1510937112
          4577187
          26324919
          8cef03f5-6504-4971-8aec-0391c6a4e872
          History

          cloud feedbacks,global warming,paleoclimate,polar amplification

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