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Coarse sea spray inhibits lightning

Earth Sciences

Coarse sea spray inhibits lightning

Z. Pan, F. Mao, et al.

Discover how fine aerosols can significantly boost lightning density over both land and ocean, while coarse sea salt has the opposite effect. This groundbreaking research by Zengxin Pan, Feiyue Mao, Daniel Rosenfeld, and colleagues illuminates the complex interactions between aerosols, thunderstorms, and climate.... show more
Abstract
The known effects of thermodynamics and aerosols can well explain the thunderstorm activity over land, but fail over oceans. Here, tracking the full lifecycle of tropical deep convective cloud clusters shows that adding fine aerosols significantly increases the lightning density for a given rainfall amount over both ocean and land. In contrast, adding coarse sea salt (dry radius > 1 µm), known as sea spray, weakens the cloud vigor and lightning by producing fewer but larger cloud drops, which accelerate warm rain at the expense of mixed-phase precipitation. Adding coarse sea spray can reduce the lightning by 90% regardless of fine aerosol loading. These findings reconcile long outstanding questions about the differences between continental and marine thunderstorms, and help to understand lightning and underlying aerosol-cloud-precipitation interaction mechanisms and their climatic effects.
Publisher
NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Published On
Aug 02, 2022
Authors
Zengxin Pan, Feiyue Mao, Daniel Rosenfeld, Yannian Zhu, Lin Zang, Xin Lu, Joel A. Thornton, Robert H. Holzworth, Jianhua Yin, Avichay Efraim, Wei Gong
Tags
thermodynamics
aerosols
lightning density
tropical convective clouds
sea salt
precipitation
climatic effects
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