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Aerosols may warm or cool the climate depending on timing, new study finds

A new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem reports that atmospheric aerosols can either warm or cool the climate depending on the time scale considered, challenging a long-held assumption in climate science that treats their effect as uniformly cooling.

A new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem challenges a long-held assumption in climate science by showing that aerosols—tiny particles suspended in the atmosphere—can either warm or cool the climate, depending on the time scale considered.

Led by Prof. Guy Dagan of the Fredy and Nadine Herrmann Institute of Earth Sciences, the research reveals that aerosol-cloud interactions can produce opposite climate effects in the short and long term. The findings, published in Nature Communications , offer a new explanation for why aerosols remain one of the largest sources of uncertainty in climate projections.

Aerosols come from a variety of natural and human-made sources, including air pollution, wildfires, sea spray and dust. Scientists have long known that these particles influence how clouds form and how much heat Earth retains, but accurately estimating their overall impact on climate has proved difficult.

Using advanced computer simulations, Prof. Dagan examined how clouds respond after a sudden increase in aerosol concentrations and how those responses evolve over time.

The results revealed a surprising pattern.

During the first two days after aerosol levels increase, the atmosphere experiences a net warming effect. Changes in cloud processes lead to the formation of more high-altitude clouds, which trap additional heat that would otherwise escape into space.

Over time, however, the atmosphere adjusts. As upper layers of the atmosphere warm, cloud development changes, allowing more heat to escape. The initial warming effect gradually gives way to an overall cooling effect.

The study found that the balance between these competing effects depends on two key factors: how quickly aerosol concentrations change and how quickly the atmosphere responds. When aerosol levels fluctuate rapidly, short-term warming effects can dominate. When changes occur more gradually, the longer-term cooling response becomes more important.

The researchers also identified evidence of what scientists call "atmospheric memory."

In some cases, the climate effect of aerosols depends not only on current aerosol levels but also on whether those levels have recently been increasing or decreasing. As a result, the same amount of aerosols can produce different climate effects under different circumstances.

According to Prof. Dagan, the findings have important implications for both climate observations and climate modeling.

"Much of what we know about aerosol-cloud interactions comes from observing the atmosphere at a single moment in time," said Prof. Dagan.

"Our results show that the atmosphere has a memory. The climatic impact of aerosols depends not only on how many particles are present, but also on how rapidly conditions are changing and how much time the atmosphere has had to respond. Accounting for these timescales could help reduce one of the largest sources of uncertainty in climate projections."

The findings suggest that scientists should pay closer attention to how atmospheric conditions evolve over days rather than relying solely on isolated observations. Incorporating these time-dependent processes into climate models could improve estimates of aerosol-driven climate effects and lead to more accurate projections of future climate change.

Publication details

Guy Dagan, Opposing transient and equilibrium effective radiative forcing from aerosol-cloud interactions, Nature Communications (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-72896-6

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Aerosols may warm or cool the climate depending on timing, new study finds (2026, June 8)

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Source document: Nature Communications

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Phys.orgIndependentCenterFactual 85Objective 9012 days ago
Aerosols may warm or cool the climate depending on timing, new study finds

A new study from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem reports that atmospheric aerosols can either warm or cool the climate depending on the time scale considered, challenging a long-held assumption in climate science that treats their effect as uniformly cooling.

Bias read (Center): Straightforward science reporting describing study findings with neutral, technical language and no political framing or loaded terms.

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