“…Accordingly, the number of clouds n having a certain size l can be described by:
where ∝ should be read “scales as,” and b is a characteristic power‐law exponent. Since then, power‐laws (or derived forms thereof like power‐laws with exponential cutoff or broken power‐laws) have been universally recognized as the best functions to model cloud size distributions obtained from either satellite imagery (Benner & Curry,
1998; Bley et al.,
2017; Koren et al.,
2008; Kuo et al.,
1993; Mieslinger et al.,
2019; Senf et al.,
2018; Sengupta et al.,
1990; Welch et al.,
1988; Wood & Field,
2011; Zhao & Di Girolamo,
2007), aircraft measurements (Benner & Curry,
1998; Jiang et al.,
2008; Wood & Field,
2011), or high‐resolution simulations (Barron et al.,
2020; Dawe & Austin,
2012; Garrett et al.,
2018; Heus & Seifert,
2013; Jiang et al.,
2008; Neggers, Jonker, & Siebesma,
2003; Rieck et al.,
2014; Senf et al.,
2018; van Laar et al.,
2019; Xue & Feingold,
2006).…”