Ice nucleation in mixed-phase clouds has been identified as a critical factor in projections of future climate. Here we explore how this process influences climate sensitivity using the Community Earth System Model 2 (CESM2). We find that ice nucleation affects simulated cloud feedbacks over most regions and levels of the troposphere, not just extratropical low clouds. However, with present-day global mean cloud phase adjusted to replicate satellite retrievals, similar total cloud feedback is attained whether ice nucleation is simulated as aerosol-sensitive, insensitive, or absent. These model experiments all result in a strongly positive total cloud feedback, as in the default CESM2. A microphysics update from CESM1 to CESM2 had substantially weakened ice nucleation, due partly to a model issue. Our findings indicate that this update reduced global cloud phase bias, with CESM2's high climate sensitivity reflecting improved mixed-phase cloud representation.
CITATION STYLE
McGraw, Z., Storelvmo, T., Polvani, L. M., Hofer, S., Shaw, J. K., & Gettelman, A. (2023). On the Links Between Ice Nucleation, Cloud Phase, and Climate Sensitivity in CESM2. Geophysical Research Letters, 50(17). https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL105053
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