“…These cloud types are widespread (coverage on the order of one-third of the globe at any given time; e.g., Hartmann et al, 1992) in the subsiding branch of the Hadley circulation (e.g., Wood, 2012) due to a separation of the cool, moist MBL and the warm, dry free troposphere by a strong (∼ 10 K) and sharp O(100-500 m) thermal inversion (e.g., Parish, 2000). Despite their substantive role in the radiation budget (global shortwave cloud radiative effect (CRE SW ) of ∼ 60-120 W m −2 ; e.g., Yi and Jian, 2013), MBL clouds and their radiative response to changes in the climate system are not simulated accurately by global climate models (e.g., Palmer and Anderson, 1994;Delecluse et al, 1998;Bachiochi and Krishnamurti, 2000;Bony and Dufresne, 2005;Webb et al, 2006;Lin et al, 2014;Bender et al, 2016Bender et al, , 2018Brient et al, 2019); however, results from regional climate models are more encouraging (e.g., Wang et al, 2004Wang et al, , 2011.…”