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von Kármán vortex street over Canary Islands
Credit: NASA

Philip Stier

Professor of Atmospheric Physics

Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Climate processes
philip.stier@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)72887
Atmospheric Physics Clarendon Laboratory, room 103
  • About
  • Research
  • Teaching
  • CV
  • Publications

Controls of cloud radiative effects: a data-driven observation-based quantification

Copernicus Publications (2023)

Authors:

Hendrik Andersen, Jan Cermak, Alyson Douglas, Philip Stier, Casey Wall
More details from the publisher

Idealised studies of aerosol effects on precipitation – from aqua-planets to global km-scale models

Copernicus Publications (2023)

Authors:

Philip Stier, Andrew Williams, Ross Herbert, Philipp Weiss, Guy Dagan, Duncan Watson-Parris
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Invertible neural networks for satellite retrievals of aerosol optical depth

Copernicus Publications (2023)

Authors:

Paolo Pelucchi, Jorge Vicent, J Emmanuel Johnson, Philip Stier, Gustau Camps-Valls
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The Diurnal Cycle of the Cloud Radiative Effect of Deep Convective Clouds over Africa from a Lagrangian Perspective

Copernicus Publications (2023)

Authors:

William Jones, Martin Stengel, Philip Stier
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Reducing aerosol forcing uncertainty by combining models with satellite and within-the-atmosphere observations: a three-way street

Reviews of Geophysics American Geophysical Union 61:2 (2023) e2022RG000796

Authors:

Ralph A Kahn, Elisabeth Andrews, Charles A Brock, Mian Chin, Graham Feingold, Andrew Gettelman, Robert C Levy, Daniel M Murphy, Athanasios Nenes, Jeffrey R Pierce, Thomas Popp, Jens Redemann, Andrew M Sayer, Arlindo da Silva, Larisa Sogacheva, Philip Stier

Abstract:

Aerosol forcing uncertainty represents the largest climate forcing uncertainty overall. Its magnitude has remained virtually undiminished over the past 20 years despite considerable advances in understanding most of the key contributing elements. Recent work has produced modest increases only in the confidence of the uncertainty estimate itself. This review summarizes the contributions toward reducing the uncertainty in the aerosol forcing of climate made by satellite observations, measurements taken within the atmosphere, as well as modeling and data assimilation. We adopt a more measurement-oriented perspective than most reviews of the subject in assessing the strengths and limitations of each; gaps and possible ways to fill them are considered. Currently planned programs supporting advanced, global-scale satellite and surface-based aerosol, cloud, and precursor gas observations, climate modeling, and intensive field campaigns aimed at characterizing the underlying physical and chemical processes involved, are all essential. But in addition, new efforts are needed: (1) to obtain systematic aircraft in situ measurements capturing the multi-variate probability distribution functions of particle optical, microphysical, and chemical properties (and associated uncertainty estimates), as well as co-variability with meteorology, for the major aerosol airmass types; (2) to conceive, develop, and implement a suborbital (aircraft plus surface-based) program aimed at systematically quantifying the cloud-scale microphysics, cloud optical properties, and cloud related vertical velocities associated with aerosol-cloud interactions; and (3) to focus much more research on integrating the unique contributions satellite observations, suborbital measurements, and modeling, in order to reduce the uncertainty in aerosol climate forcing.
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