The sensitivity of a mid-latitude maritime stratocumulus cloud to surface fluxes

被引:1
|
作者
Ren, Yangze [1 ]
Fu, Shizuo [2 ,3 ]
Xue, Huiwen [1 ]
机构
[1] Peking Univ, Sch Phys, Dept Atmospher & Ocean Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China
[2] Fujian Normal Univ, Key Lab Humid Subtrop Ecogeog Proc, Minist Educ, Fuzhou, Peoples R China
[3] Fujian Normal Univ, Sch Geog Sci, Fuzhou, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
Stratocumulus cloud; Surface flux; Turbulence; LARGE-EDDY SIMULATIONS; STRATIFORM CLOUD; BOUNDARY-LAYERS; TURBULENCE; OCEAN; VARIABILITY; ENTRAINMENT; RADIATION; SKEWNESS; CYCLE;
D O I
10.1016/j.atmosres.2023.106912
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
Surface fluxes of stratocumulus clouds over mid-latitude oceans have larger variability and bigger Bowen ratios than those over subtropical oceans. This study investigates how mid-latitude maritime stratocumulus clouds respond to surface fluxes and what the underlying mechanisms are. A closed-cellular stratocumulus cloud over mid-latitude North Pacific Ocean is simulated with large eddy simulation. A control case and a reduced-flux case (with surface fluxes 50% reduced) are compared. Liquid water path (LWP) and turbulent kinetic energy (TKE) decrease as surface fluxes are reduced. It is revealed that reducing surface fluxes leads to a cooler and drier boundary layer, which directly leads to a higher cloud base. The weaker turbulence near the cloud top leads to less entrainment, resulting in a lower cloud top. Therefore, the cloud is 21% thinner with a smaller LWP in the reduced-flux case. Quadrant analysis shows that TKE production processes including surface heating, in-cloud latent heating, and cloud-top evaporative cooling are all weaker in the reduced-flux case. Meanwhile, cloudtop entrainment heating and overshooting of air parcels into the inversion, as TKE consumption processes, are also weaker in the reduced-flux case. These TKE production and consumption processes counteract with each other, leading to quite different pictures of turbulence transport in the two cases. In the subcloud layer, the control case is dominated by surface heating (indicating a turbulent heating effect), while the reduced-flux case is dominated by evaporative cooling in the downdraft region (indicating a turbulent cooling effect). In the cloud layer, the difference of heat flux between the two cases is mainly due to the difference in latent heating. At cloud top, the two cases have similar heat flux.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Mid-latitude glaciation on Mars
    Souness, Colin
    Hubbard, Bryn
    PROGRESS IN PHYSICAL GEOGRAPHY, 2012, 36 (02) : 238 - 261
  • [22] Mid-latitude mercury loss
    Parisa A. Ariya
    Nature Geoscience, 2011, 4 : 14 - 15
  • [23] Mid-latitude atmospheric dynamics
    Gray, Suzanne
    AREA, 2007, 39 (02) : 252 - 253
  • [24] MID-LATITUDE PULSATING AURORAS
    HALL, WN
    PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE, 1974, 22 (09) : 1315 - 1321
  • [25] The influence of mid-latitude cyclones on European background surface ozone
    Knowland, K. Emma
    Doherty, Ruth M.
    Hodges, Kevin I.
    Ott, Lesley E.
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2017, 17 (20) : 12421 - 12447
  • [26] Snowpack sensitivity to perturbed climate in a cool mid-latitude mountain catchment
    Rasouli, Kabir
    Pomeroy, John W.
    Marks, Danny G.
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2015, 29 (18) : 3925 - 3940
  • [27] Towards closing the surface energy budget of a mid-latitude grassland
    Jacobs, Adrie F. G.
    Heusinkveld, Bert G.
    Holtslag, Albert A. M.
    BOUNDARY-LAYER METEOROLOGY, 2008, 126 (01) : 125 - 136
  • [28] Towards Closing the Surface Energy Budget of a Mid-latitude Grassland
    Adrie F. G. Jacobs
    Bert G. Heusinkveld
    Albert A. M. Holtslag
    Boundary-Layer Meteorology, 2008, 126 : 125 - 136
  • [29] AIR-FLOW THROUGH MID-LATITUDE CYCLONES AND THE COMMA CLOUD PATTERN
    CARLSON, TN
    MONTHLY WEATHER REVIEW, 1980, 108 (10) : 1498 - 1509
  • [30] Parametrization of ice-particle size distributions for mid-latitude stratiform cloud
    Field, PR
    Hogan, RJ
    Brown, PRA
    Illingworth, AJ
    Choularton, TW
    Cotton, RJ
    QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2005, 131 (609) : 1997 - 2017