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91̽»¨
Juno Jupiter image

William Jones (he/him)

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Research theme

  • Climate physics

Sub department

  • Atmospheric, Oceanic and Planetary Physics

Research groups

  • Climate processes
william.jones@physics.ox.ac.uk
  • About
  • Publications

NightVision: Generating Nighttime Satellite Imagery from Infra-Red Observations

(2020)

Authors:

Paula Harder, William Jones, Redouane Lguensat, Shahine Bouabid, James Fulton, Dánell Quesada-Chacón, Aris Marcolongo, Sofija Stefanović, Yuhan Rao, Peter Manshausen, Duncan Watson-Parris

The 2020 Climate Informatics Hackathon: Generating Nighttime Satellite Imagery from Infrared Observations

Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) (2020) 134-138

Authors:

William K Jones, Redouane Lguensat, Anastase Charantonis, Duncan Watson-Parris

Aerosols enhance cloud lifetime and brightness along the stratus-to-cumulus transition

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences National Academy of Sciences 117:30 (2020) 17591-17598

Authors:

Matthew Christensen, William Jones, Philip Stier

Abstract:

Anthropogenic aerosols are hypothesized to enhance planetary albedo and offset some of the warming due to the buildup of greenhouse gases in Earth’s atmosphere. Aerosols can enhance the coverage, reflectance, and lifetime of warm low-level clouds. However, the relationship between cloud lifetime and aerosol concentration has been challenging to measure from polar orbiting satellites. We estimate two timescales relating to the formation and persistence of low-level clouds over 1○×1○ spatial domains using multiple years of geostationary satellite observations provided by the Clouds and Earth’s Radiant Energy System (CERES) Synoptic (SYN) product. Lagrangian trajectories spanning several days along the classic stratus-to-cumulus transition zone are stratified by aerosol optical depth and meteorology. Clouds forming in relatively polluted trajectories tend to have lighter precipitation rates, longer average lifetime, and higher cloud albedo and cloud fraction compared with unpolluted trajectories. While liquid water path differences are found to be negligible, we find direct evidence of increased planetary albedo primarily through increased drop concentration (Nd) and cloud fraction, with the caveat that the aerosol influence on cloud fraction is positive only for stable atmospheric conditions. While the increase in cloud fraction can be large typically in the beginning of trajectories, the Twomey effect accounts for the bulk (roughly 3/4) of the total aerosol indirect radiative forcing estimate.

A semi-Lagrangian perspective of the lifecycle and interactions of deep convective clouds in geostationary satellite observations

Copernicus Publications (2020)

Authors:

William Jones, Max Heikenfeld, Matthew Christensen, Philip Stier

tobac v1.5: Introducing Fast 3D Tracking, Splits and Mergers, and Other Enhancements for Identifying and Analysing Meteorological Phenomena

Authors:

G Alexander Sokolowsky, Sean W Freeman, William K Jones, Julia Kukulies, Fabian Senf, Peter J Marinescu, Max Heikenfeld, Kelcy N Brunner, Eric C Bruning, Scott M Collis, Robert C Jackson, Gabrielle R Leung, Nils Pfeifer, Bhupendra A Raut, Stephen M Saleeby, Philip Stier, Susan C van den Heever

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