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contributor authorSaleeby, Stephen M.
contributor authorCotton, William R.
contributor authorLowenthal, Douglas
contributor authorBorys, Randolph D.
contributor authorWetzel, Melanie A.
date accessioned2017-06-09T16:22:32Z
date available2017-06-09T16:22:32Z
date copyright2009/05/01
date issued2009
identifier issn1558-8424
identifier otherams-66716.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4208083
description abstractPollution aerosols acting as cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) have the potential to alter warm rain clouds via the aerosol first and second indirect effects in which they modify the cloud droplet population, cloud lifetime and size, rainfall efficiency, and radiation balance from increased albedo. For constant liquid water content, an increase in CCN concentration (NCCN) tends to produce an increased concentration of droplets with smaller diameters. This reduces the collision and coalescence rate, and thus there is a local reduction in rainfall. While this process applies to warm clouds, it does not identically carry over to mixed-phase clouds in which crystal nucleation, crystal riming, crystal versus droplet fall speed, and collection efficiency play active roles in determining precipitation amount. Sulfate-based aerosols serve as very efficient cloud nuclei but are not effective as ice-forming nuclei. In clouds where precipitation formation is dominated by the ice phase, NCCN influences precipitation growth by altering the efficiency of droplet collection by ice crystals and the fall trajectories of both droplet and crystal hydrometeors. The temporal and spatial variation in both crystal and droplet populations determines the resultant snowfall efficiency and distribution. Results of numerical simulations in this study suggest that CCN can play a significant role in snowfall production by winter, mixed-phase, cloud systems when liquid and ice hydrometeors coexist. In subfreezing conditions, a precipitating ice cloud overlaying a supercooled liquid water cloud allows growth of precipitation particles via the seeder?feeder process, in which nucleated ice crystals fall through the supercooled liquid water cloud and collect droplets. Enhanced NCCN from sulfate pollution by fossil fuel emissions modifies the droplet distribution and reduces crystal riming efficiency. Reduced riming efficiency inhibits the rate of snow growth, producing lightly rimed snow crystals that fall slowly and advect farther downstream prior to surface deposition. Simulations indicate that increasing NCCN along the orographic barrier of the Park Range in north-central Colorado results in a modification of the orographic cloud such that the surface snow water equivalent amounts are reduced on the windward slopes and enhanced on the leeward slopes. The inhibition of snowfall by pollution aerosols (ISPA) effect has significant implications for water resource distribution in mountainous terrain.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleInfluence of Cloud Condensation Nuclei on Orographic Snowfall
typeJournal Paper
journal volume48
journal issue5
journal titleJournal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
identifier doi10.1175/2008JAMC1989.1
journal fristpage903
journal lastpage922
treeJournal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology:;2009:;volume( 048 ):;issue: 005
contenttypeFulltext


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