15 research outputs found
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Effects of Aerosols on the Radiative Properties of Clouds
The influence of anthropogenic aerosols, in the form of ship exhaust effluent, on the microphysics and radiative properties of marine stratocumulus is studied using data gathered from the U.K. Met. Office C-130 and the University of Washington C-131A aircraft during the Monterey Area Ship Track (MAST) experiment in 1994. During the period of MAST, stratocumulus clouds were studied during 11 flights and a wide range of levels of background pollution was observed. The impact of the aerosol emitted from the ships was found to be very dependent on the background cloud microphysical conditions. In clouds of continental influence, the susceptibility of the cloud to further aerosol emissions was low, with a correspondingly weak microphysics and radiation signature in the ship tracks. In clean clouds, changes in droplet concentration of a factor of 2, and reductions in droplet size of up to 50%, were measured. These changes in the microphysics had significant impacts on the cloud radiative forcing. Furthermore, as a result of the cloud droplet size being reduced, in some cases the drizzle was suppressed in the clean clouds, resulting in an increase in liquid water path in the polluted ship track environment. The impact of this combined change in liquid water path and droplet radius was to increase the cloud radiative forcing by up to a factor of 4
A View of Tropical Cyclones from Above: The Tropical Cyclone Intensity Experiment
Tropical cyclone (TC) outflow and its relationship to TC intensity change and structure were investigated in the Office of Naval Research Tropical Cyclone Intensity (TCI) field program during 2015 using dropsondes deployed from the innovative new High-Definition Sounding System (HDSS) and remotely sensed observations from the Hurricane Imaging Radiometer (HIRAD), both on board the NASA WB-57 that flew in the lower stratosphere. Three noteworthy hurricanes were intensively observed with unprecedented horizontal resolution: Joaquin in the Atlantic and Marty and Patricia in the eastern North Pacific. Nearly 800 dropsondes were deployed from the WB-57 flight level of ∼60,000 ft (∼18 km), recording atmospheric conditions from the lower stratosphere to the surface, while HIRAD measured the surface winds in a 50-km-wide swath with a horizontal resolution of 2 km. Dropsonde transects with 4–10-km spacing through the inner cores of Hurricanes Patricia, Joaquin, and Marty depict the large horizontal and vertical gradients in winds and thermodynamic properties. An innovative technique utilizing GPS positions of the HDSS reveals the vortex tilt in detail not possible before. In four TCI flights over Joaquin, systematic measurements of a major hurricane’s outflow layer were made at high spatial resolution for the first time. Dropsondes deployed at 4-km intervals as the WB-57 flew over the center of Hurricane Patricia reveal in unprecedented detail the inner-core structure and upper-tropospheric outflow associated with this historic hurricane. Analyses and numerical modeling studies are in progress to understand and predict the complex factors that influenced Joaquin’s and Patricia’s unusual intensity changes
Physical, chemical, and optical properties of regional hazes dominated by smoke in Brazil
International audienceGas and particle measurements are described for optically thick regional hazes, dominated by aged smoke from biomass buming, in the cermdo and rain forested regions of Brazil. The hazes tended to be evenly mixed from the surface to the trade wind inversion at 34 km in altitude. The properties of aged gases and particles in the regional hazes were significantly different from those of young smoke (<4 min old). As the smoke aged, the total amount of carbon in non-methane hydrocarbon species (C<I 1) was depleted by about one third due t
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Drizzle suppression in ship tracks
Although drizzle was a relatively infrequent occurrence during the Monterey Area Ship Track study, diverse measurements from several source produced data signals consistent with a reduction in drizzle drops in stratus clouds affected by ship effluents. Concurrent increases in liquid water in the cloud droplet size range, due to redistribution from the drizzle mode, were not always observed, possibly because of the relatively small and often negligible amounts of water in the drizzle mode. Significant changes in cloud droplet size distribution, as well as reductions in drizzle flux and concentrations of drops >50-um radius, were observed in ship tracks when drizzle was more uniformly present in the ambient cloud. Radiometric measurements showed that increased concentrations in ship tracks, which resulted in reduced droplet size, can significantly alter the liquid water path. Radar observations indicated that the reduced reflectivities of ship tracks compared with ambient clouds may be due to reductions in the concentrations of larger drops and/or reductions in the sizes of these drops. Two independent modeling studies showed decreases in drizzle in ship tracks due to the presence of smaller cloud droplets that reduced the efficiency of drop growth by collisions.This work was sponsored by the Department of the Navy, Office of Naval Research, under Grant N00014-92-J-1587This work was sponsored by the Department of the Navy, Office of Naval Research, under Grant N00014-92-J-1587Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited
Aerosol dynamics in ship tracks
Ship tracks are a natural laboratory to isolate the effect of anthropogenic
aerosol emissions on cloud properties. The Monterey Area Ship Tracks (MAST)
experiment in the Pacific Ocean west of Monterey, California, in June 1994, provides
an unprecedented data set for evaluating our understanding of the formation and
persistence of the anomalous cloud features that characterize ship tracks. The
data set includes conditions in which the marine boundary layer is both clean
and continentally influenced. Two case studies during the MAST experiment are
examined with a detailed aerosol microphysical model that considers an external
mixture of independent particle populations. The model allows tracking individual
particles through condensational and coagulational growth to identify the source
of cloud condensation nuclei (CCN). In addition, a cloud microphysics model was
employed to study specific effects of precipitation. Predictions and observations
reveal important differences between clean (particle concentrations below 150 cm -3)
and continentally influenced (particle concentrations above 400 cm-3 ) background
conditions: in the continentally influenced conditions there is a smaller change in
the cloud effective radius, drop number and liquid water content in the ship track
relative to the background than in the clean marine case. Predictions of changes
in cloud droplet number concentrations and effective radii are consistent with
observations although there is significant uncertainty in the absolute concentrations
due to a lack of measurements of the plume dilution. Gas-to-particle conversion of
sulfur species produced by the combustion of ship fuel is predicted to be important
in supplying soluble aerosol mass to combustion-generated particles, so as to render
them available as CCN. Studies of the impact of these changes on the cloud's
potential to precipitate concluded that more complex dynamical processes must be
represented to allow sufficiently long drop activations for drizzle droplets to form.This analysis was supported by NSF grant ATM-9732949 and ONR grant N00014-97-1- 0673. The aerosol measurements on which this work was based were supported by ONR grant N00014-93-1-0872