Another climate feedback found: «cooling effect of
natural atmospheric particles is greater during warmer years»
Understanding the climate impact of
natural atmospheric particles An international team of scientists, led by the University of Leeds, has quantified the relationship between natural sources of particles in the atmosphere and climate change.
Not exact matches
A team of scientists led by Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
atmospheric researcher Dr. Susannah Burrows and collaborator Daniel McCoy, who studies clouds and climate at the University of Washington, reveal how tiny
natural particles given off by marine organisms — airborne droplets and solid
particles called aerosols — nearly double cloud droplet numbers in the summer, which boosts the amount of sunlight reflected back to space.
Partly by taking an exacting approach to
atmospheric aerosols, which are
natural and human - generated
particles that play a role in the distribution of solar energy.
Perhaps taking the time to familiarize oneself with the
atmospheric circulation patterns of the area will show that it is perfectly normal,
natural and expected that those
particles reach Antarctica through warm air advection pathways... Just look at a satellite animation.