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Large-eddy simulations of marine boundary-layer clouds associated with cold air outbreaks during the ACTIVATE campaign-part 1: Case setup and sensitivities to large-scale forcings

Authors :
Xiang-Yu Li
Christiane Voigt
Armin Sorooshian
Ewan Crosbie
Gao Chen
Richard Anthony Ferrare
Gustafson, William I.
Johnathan Hair
Mary Kleb
Hongyu Liu
Richard Moore
Hailong Wang
David Painemal
Claire Robinson
Amy Jo Scarino
Michael Shook
Taylor Shingler
Kenneth Lee Thornhill
Florian Tornow
Heng Xiao
Luke Ziemba
Paquita Zuidema
Jingyi Chen
Satoshi Endo
Geet George
Brian Cairns
Seethala Chellappan
Xubin Zeng
Simon Kirschler
Source :
Web of Science

Abstract

Large-eddy simulation (LES) is able to capture key boundary-layer (BL) turbulence and cloud processes. Yet, large-scale forcing and surface turbulent fluxes of sensible and latent heat are often poorly prescribed for LES simulations. We derive these quantities from measurements and reanalysis obtained for two cold air outbreak (CAO) events during Phase I of the Aerosol Cloud meTeorology Interactions oVer the western ATlantic Experiment (ACTIVATE) in February-March 2020. We study the two contrasting CAO cases by performing LES and test the sensitivity of BL structure and clouds to large-scale forcings and turbulent heat fluxes. Profiles of atmospheric state and large-scale divergence and surface turbulent heat fluxes obtained from the reanalysis data ERA5 agree reasonably well with those derived from ACTIVATE field measurements for both cases at the sampling time and location. Therefore, we adopt the time evolving heat fluxes, wind and advective tendencies profiles from ERA5 reanalysis data to drive the LES. We find that large-scale thermodynamic advective tendencies and wind relaxations are important for the LES to capture the evolving observed BL meteorological states characterized by the hourly ERA5 reanalysis data and validated by the observations. We show that the divergence (or vertical velocity) is important in regulating the BL growth driven by surface heat fluxes in LES simulations. The evolution of liquid water path is largely affected by the evolution of surface heat fluxes. The liquid water path simulated in LES agrees reasonably well with the ACTIVATE measurements.This study paves the path to investigate aerosol-cloud-meteorology interactions using LES informed and evaluated by ACTIVATE field measurements.<br />Accepted for publication in Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Web of Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b256b00877da1dba0741c6e7858ca8d5