4.4 Article

Shallow Cumulus Properties as Captured by Adiabatic Fraction in High-Resolution LES Simulations

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES
Volume 79, Issue 2, Pages 409-428

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JAS-D-21-0201.1

Keywords

Mixing; Cloud microphysics; Cumulus clouds; Large eddy simulations

Funding

  1. European Research Council (ERC), under the European Union [810370]
  2. Department of Energy [DE964SC0008811]
  3. Israel Science Foundation [2027/17, 2635/20]
  4. Weizmann Institute Sustainability and Energy Research Initiative

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Shallow convective clouds play an important role in Earth's energy budget and hydrological cycle, and contribute greatly to the uncertainty in climate predictions. By studying cloud structure and processes, using the adiabatic fraction as a metric can effectively analyze cloud properties and the formation of droplet-size distribution.
Shallow convective clouds are important players in Earth's energy budget and hydrological cycle, and are abundant in the tropical and subtropical belts. They greatly contribute to the uncertainty in climate predictions due to their unresolved, complex processes that include coupling between the dynamics and microphysics. Analysis of cloud structure can be simplified by considering cloud motions as a combination of moist adiabatic motions like adiabatic updrafts and turbulent motions leading to deviation from adiabaticity. In this work, we study the sizes and occurrence of adiabatic regions in shallow cumulus clouds during their growth and mature stages, and use the adiabatic fraction (AF) as a continuous metric to describe cloud processes and properties from the core to the edge. To do so, we simulate isolated trade wind cumulus clouds of different sizes using the System of Atmospheric Modeling (SAM) model in high resolution (10 m) with the Hebrew University spectral bin microphysics (SBM). The fine features in the clouds' dynamics and microphysics, including small near-adiabatic volumes and a thin transition zone at the edge of the cloud (similar to 20-40 m in width), are captured. The AF is shown to be an efficient measure for analyzing cloud properties and key processes determining the droplet-size distribution formation and shape during the cloud evolution. Physical processes governing the properties of droplet size distributions at different cloud regions (e.g., core, edge) are analyzed in relation to AF.

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