4.7 Article

Ice crystal number concentration estimates from lidar-radar satellite remote sensing - Part 1: Method and evaluation

期刊

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
卷 18, 期 19, 页码 14327-14350

出版社

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-18-14327-2018

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资金

  1. European Research Council [306284]
  2. Federal Ministry for Education and Research in Germany (Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung, BMBF) in the HD(CP) 2project [FKZ 01LK1210D, 01LK1503A, 01LK1505E]
  3. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG) Priority Programme SPP 1294 HALO, project [QU311/14-1]
  4. European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant [703880]
  5. Imperial College London Junior Research Fellowship
  6. German Research Foundation (DFG) and Leipzig University

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The number concentration of cloud particles is a key quantity for understanding aerosol-cloud interactions and describing clouds in climate and numerical weather prediction models. In contrast with recent advances for liquid clouds, few observational constraints exist regarding the ice crystal number concentration (N-i). This study investigates how combined lidar-radar measurements can be used to provide satellite estimates of N-i, using a methodology that constrains moments of a parameterized particle size distribution (PSD). The operational liDAR-raDAR (DARDAR) product serves as an existing base for this method, which focuses on ice clouds with temperatures T-c < -30 degrees C. Theoretical considerations demonstrate the capability for accurate retrievals of N-i, apart from a possible bias in the concentration in small crystals when T-c greater than or similar to - 50 degrees C, due to the assumption of a monomodal PSD shape in the current method. This is verified via a comparison of satellite estimates to coincident in situ measurements, which additionally demonstrates the sufficient sensitivity of lidar-radar observations to N-i. Following these results, satellite estimates of N-i are evaluated in the context of a case study and a preliminary climatological analysis based on 10 years of global data. Despite a lack of other large-scale references, this evaluation shows a reasonable physical consistency in N-i spatial distribution patterns. Notably, increases in N-i are found towards cold temperatures and, more significantly, in the presence of strong updrafts, such as those related to convective or orographic uplifts. Further evaluation and improvement of this method are necessary, although these results already constitute a first encouraging step towards large-scale observational constraints for N-i. Part 2 of this series uses this new dataset to examine the controls on N-i.

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