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contributor authorGarrett, T. J.
contributor authorNavarro, B. C.
contributor authorTwohy, C. H.
contributor authorJensen, E. J.
contributor authorBaumgardner, D. G.
contributor authorBui, P. T.
contributor authorGerber, H.
contributor authorHerman, R. L.
contributor authorHeymsfield, A. J.
contributor authorLawson, P.
contributor authorMinnis, P.
contributor authorNguyen, L.
contributor authorPoellot, M.
contributor authorPope, S. K.
contributor authorValero, F. P. J.
contributor authorWeinstock, E. M.
date accessioned2017-06-09T16:52:21Z
date available2017-06-09T16:52:21Z
date copyright2005/07/01
date issued2005
identifier issn0022-4928
identifier otherams-75682.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4218045
description abstractThis paper presents a detailed study of a single thunderstorm anvil cirrus cloud measured on 21 July 2002 near southern Florida during the Cirrus Regional Study of Tropical Anvils and Cirrus Layers?Florida Area Cirrus Experiment (CRYSTAL-FACE). NASA WB-57F and University of North Dakota Citation aircraft tracked the microphysical and radiative development of the anvil for 3 h. Measurements showed that the cloud mass that was advected downwind from the thunderstorm was separated vertically into two layers: a cirrus anvil with cloud-top temperatures of ?45°C lay below a second, thin tropopause cirrus (TTC) layer with the same horizontal dimensions as the anvil and temperatures near ?70°C. In both cloud layers, ice crystals smaller than 50 ?m across dominated the size distributions and cloud radiative properties. In the anvil, ice crystals larger than 50 ?m aggregated and precipitated while small ice crystals increasingly dominated the size distributions; as a consequence, measured ice water contents and ice crystal effective radii decreased with time. Meanwhile, the anvil thinned vertically and maintained a stratification similar to its environment. Because effective radii were small, radiative heating and cooling were concentrated in layers approximately 100 m thick at the anvil top and base. A simple analysis suggests that the anvil cirrus spread laterally because mixing in these radiatively driven layers created horizontal pressure gradients between the cloud and its stratified environment. The TTC layer also spread but, unlike the anvil, did not dissipate?perhaps because the anvil shielded the TTC from terrestrial infrared heating. Calculations of top-of-troposphere radiative forcing above the anvil and TTC showed strong cooling that tapered as the anvil evolved.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleEvolution of a Florida Cirrus Anvil
typeJournal Paper
journal volume62
journal issue7
journal titleJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences
identifier doi10.1175/JAS3495.1
journal fristpage2352
journal lastpage2372
treeJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences:;2005:;Volume( 062 ):;issue: 007
contenttypeFulltext


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