Abstract. Cold-air outbreaks (CAOs) are characterized by extreme air-sea energy exchanges and low-level convective clouds over large areas in the high latitude oceans. As such, CAOs are an important component of the Earth’s climate system. The CAOs in the Marine Boundary Layer Experiment (COMBLE) deployment of the US Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Mobile Facility (AMF) provided the first comprehensive view of CAOs using a suite of ground-based observations at the northern coast of Norway. Here, cloud and precipitation observations from 13 CAO cases during COMBLE are analysed. A vertical air motion retrieval technique is applied to the Ka-band ARM Zenith-pointing Radar (KAZR) observations. The CAO cumulus clouds are characterized by strong updrafts with magnitudes between 2–8 m s-1, vertical extents of 1–3 km, and horizontal scales of 0.25–3 km. A strong relationship between our vertical air velocity retrievals and liquid water path (LWP) measurements is found. The LWP measurements exceed 1 kg m-2 in strong updraft areas, and the vertical extent of the updraft correlates well with the LWP values. The CAO cumulus clouds exhibit large values of eddy dissipation rate. Finally, evidence of secondary ice production in the CAO cumulus clouds is presented.
Abstract. Cold-air outbreaks (CAOs) are characterized by extreme air–sea energy
exchanges and low-level convective clouds over large areas in the high-latitude oceans. As such, CAOs are an important component of the Earth's
climate system. The CAOs in the Marine Boundary Layer Experiment (COMBLE)
deployment of the US Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement
(ARM) Mobile Facility (AMF) provided the first comprehensive view of CAOs
using a suite of ground-based observations at the northern coast of Norway.
Here, cloud and precipitation observations from 13 CAO cases during COMBLE
are analyzed. A vertical air motion retrieval technique is applied to the
Ka-band ARM Zenith-pointing Radar (KAZR) observations. The CAO cumulus
clouds are characterized by strong updrafts with magnitudes between 2–8 m s−1, vertical extents of 1–3 km, and horizontal scales of 0.25–3 km. A strong relationship between our vertical air velocity retrievals and
liquid water path (LWP) measurements is found. The LWP measurements exceed 1 kg m−2 in strong updraft areas, and the vertical extent of the updraft
correlates well with the LWP values. The CAO cumulus clouds exhibit eddy
dissipation rate values between 10−3 and 10−2 m2 s−3 in
the lowest 10 km of the atmosphere, and using a radar Doppler
spectra technique, evidence of secondary ice production is found during one
of the cases.
Biogenic gases are a prominent component of the summertime marine boundary layer (MBL) over the Eastern North Atlantic. One of these gases, dimethyl sulfide (DMS), can produce sulfate cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) that, in theory, can brighten clouds through photolysis, and produces a reaction product, methane sulfonic acid (MSA). It is also possible that DMS can interact with sea‐salt or other marine aerosols changing their CCN activation spectrum, which could also modify cloud microphysical structure. Data collected aboard the G1 aircraft during the Aerosol Cloud Experiment Eastern North Atlantic (ACE‐ENA) in well‐mixed and decoupled marine boundary layers (MBLs) were used to examine relationships between the cloud droplet effective radii, re ${r}_{e}$, and the concentrations of DMS and MSA in constant cloud liquid water content (LWC) bins. A weak but statistically significant negative correlation was observed between CCN concentration and re ${r}_{e}$ in most LWC bins, regardless of the source of the CCN, while a weak but statistically significant positive correlation between re ${r}_{e}$ and DMS was observed. No correlation between the cloud droplet number concentration and DMS was found. The presence of MSA indicated that DMS‐to‐sulfate photolysis was likely occurring, but data sparsity prevented a statistically significant conclusion regarding the relationship between MSA and re ${r}_{e}$. Data sparsity in decoupled conditions also prevented statistically significant conclusions. To properly address biogenic gas impacts on cloud microphysics, it is recommended that aircraft data be supplemented by long‐term biogenic gas measurements at the surface in marine locations with appropriate remote and in‐situ cloud sensing capabilities, and the analysis limited to well‐mixed MBL's.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.