Drawing on 35 years of satellite observations, an international research team led by ETH Zurich found that mineral dust - tiny particles swept up by the wind and carried into the upper atmosphere - can trigger the freezing of cloud droplets. This process is particularly important in northern regions, where clouds often form in a temperature range just below freezing.
"We found that where there's more dust, clouds are much more likely to freeze at the top," explains Diego Villanueva, a Post-doctoral researcher for Atmospheric Physics at ETH Zurich and lead author of the study. "This has a direct impact on how much sunlight is reflected back into space and how much precipitation is generated."
By comparing the frequency of ice-topped clouds with dust levels, the researchers observed a remarkably consistent pattern: The more dust and the cooler the clouds, the more frequent the ice clouds. What is more, according to the researchers, this pattern aligned almost perfectly with what laboratory experiments had predicted about how dust triggers droplet freezing.
"This is one of the first studies to show that satellite measurements of cloud composition match what we've known from lab work," says Ulrike Lohmann, senior co-author, and Professor of Atmospheric Physics at ETH Zurich.
The new findings establish a measurable link between airborne dust and cloud-top ice frequency, providing a critical benchmark for improving climate projections. "It helps identify one of the most uncertain pieces of the climate puzzle," says Villanueva.
Still, the dust-ice link does not play out equally across the globe. In desert regions like the Sahara, cloud formation is sparse, and the strong movement of hotter air may suppress the freezing process. Also in the Southern Hemisphere, marine aerosols may take over dust's role. The researcher team emphasizes the need for further studies to better understand how other factors such as updraft strength or atmospheric humidity, for example, influence cloud freezing. For now, however, one thing is clear: Tiny dust grains from distant deserts help shape the clouds above our heads - and with them, the future of our climate.
Research Report:Dust-driven droplet freezing explains cloud top phase in the northern extratropics
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