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    A Study of Aerosol Impacts on Clouds and Precipitation Development in a Large Winter Cyclone

    Source: Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences:;2014:;Volume( 071 ):;issue: 010::page 3636
    Author:
    Thompson, Gregory
    ,
    Eidhammer, Trude
    DOI: 10.1175/JAS-D-13-0305.1
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: erosols influence cloud and precipitation development in complex ways due to myriad feedbacks at a variety of scales from individual clouds through entire storm systems. This paper describes the implementation, testing, and results of a newly modified bulk microphysical parameterization with explicit cloud droplet nucleation and ice activation by aerosols. Idealized tests and a high-resolution, convection-permitting, continental-scale, 72-h simulation with five sensitivity experiments showed that increased aerosol number concentration results in more numerous cloud droplets of overall smaller size and delays precipitation development. Furthermore, the smaller droplet sizes cause the expected increased cloud albedo effect and more subtle longwave radiation effects. Although increased aerosols generally hindered the warm-rain processes, regions of mixed-phase clouds were impacted in slightly unexpected ways with more precipitation falling north of a synoptic-scale warm front. Aerosol impacts to regions of light precipitation, less than approximately 2.5 mm h?1, were far greater than impacts to regions with higher precipitation rates. Comparisons of model forecasts with five different aerosol states versus surface precipitation measurements revealed that even a large-scale storm system with nearly a thousand observing locations did not indicate which experiment produced a more correct final forecast, indicating a need for far longer-duration simulations due to the magnitude of both model forecast error and observational uncertainty. Last, since aerosols affect cloud and precipitation phase and amount, there are resulting implications to a variety of end-user applications such as surface sensible weather and aircraft icing.
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      A Study of Aerosol Impacts on Clouds and Precipitation Development in a Large Winter Cyclone

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    contributor authorThompson, Gregory
    contributor authorEidhammer, Trude
    date accessioned2017-06-09T16:56:50Z
    date available2017-06-09T16:56:50Z
    date copyright2014/10/01
    date issued2014
    identifier issn0022-4928
    identifier otherams-76885.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4219381
    description abstracterosols influence cloud and precipitation development in complex ways due to myriad feedbacks at a variety of scales from individual clouds through entire storm systems. This paper describes the implementation, testing, and results of a newly modified bulk microphysical parameterization with explicit cloud droplet nucleation and ice activation by aerosols. Idealized tests and a high-resolution, convection-permitting, continental-scale, 72-h simulation with five sensitivity experiments showed that increased aerosol number concentration results in more numerous cloud droplets of overall smaller size and delays precipitation development. Furthermore, the smaller droplet sizes cause the expected increased cloud albedo effect and more subtle longwave radiation effects. Although increased aerosols generally hindered the warm-rain processes, regions of mixed-phase clouds were impacted in slightly unexpected ways with more precipitation falling north of a synoptic-scale warm front. Aerosol impacts to regions of light precipitation, less than approximately 2.5 mm h?1, were far greater than impacts to regions with higher precipitation rates. Comparisons of model forecasts with five different aerosol states versus surface precipitation measurements revealed that even a large-scale storm system with nearly a thousand observing locations did not indicate which experiment produced a more correct final forecast, indicating a need for far longer-duration simulations due to the magnitude of both model forecast error and observational uncertainty. Last, since aerosols affect cloud and precipitation phase and amount, there are resulting implications to a variety of end-user applications such as surface sensible weather and aircraft icing.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleA Study of Aerosol Impacts on Clouds and Precipitation Development in a Large Winter Cyclone
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume71
    journal issue10
    journal titleJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences
    identifier doi10.1175/JAS-D-13-0305.1
    journal fristpage3636
    journal lastpage3658
    treeJournal of the Atmospheric Sciences:;2014:;Volume( 071 ):;issue: 010
    contenttypeFulltext
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