• Title of article

    Polluting of winter convective clouds upon transition from ocean inland over central California: Contrasting case studies

  • Author/Authors

    Rosenfeld، نويسنده , , Daniel and Chemke، نويسنده , , Rei and Prather، نويسنده , , Kimberly and Suski، نويسنده , , Kaitlyn and Comstock، نويسنده , , Jennifer M. and Schmid، نويسنده , , Beat and Tomlinson، نويسنده , , Jason and Jonsson، نويسنده , , Haflidi، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    112
  • To page
    127
  • Abstract
    In-situ aircraft measurements of aerosol chemical and cloud microphysical properties were conducted during the CalWater campaign in February and March 2011 over the Sierra Nevada Mountains and the coastal waters of central California. The main objective was to elucidate the impacts of aerosol properties on clouds and precipitation forming processes. In order to accomplish this, we compared contrasting cases of clouds that ingested aerosols from different sources. The results showed that clouds containing pristine oceanic air had low cloud drop concentrations and started to develop rain 500 m above their base. This occurred both over the ocean and over the Sierra Nevada, mainly in the early morning when the radiatively cooled stable continental boundary layer was decoupled from the cloud base. Supercooled rain dominated the precipitation that formed in growing convective clouds in the pristine air, up to the − 21 °C isotherm level. rasting situation was documented in the afternoon over the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, when the clouds ingested high pollution aerosol concentrations produced in the Central Valley. This led to slow growth of the cloud drop effective radius with height and suppressed and even prevented the initiation of warm rain while contributing to the development of ice hydrometeors in the form of graupel. Our results show that cloud condensation and ice nuclei were the limiting factors that controlled warm rain and ice processes, respectively, while the unpolluted clouds in the same air mass produced precipitation quite efficiently. These findings provide the motivation for deeper investigations into the nature of the aerosols seeding clouds.
  • Keywords
    Cloud–aerosol interactions , Precipitation suppression
  • Journal title
    Atmospheric Research
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Atmospheric Research
  • Record number

    2247809