Publication | Open Access
Impact on modeled cloud characteristics due to simplified treatment of uniform cloud condensation nuclei during NEAQS 2004
206
Citations
25
References
2007
Year
Neaqs 2004EngineeringClimate ModelingAtmospheric ModelEarth System ScienceModeled Cloud CharacteristicsEarth ScienceAtmospheric ScienceUniform Cloud CondensationCloud PhysicsMeteorologyAtmospheric InteractionAtmospheric IcingSubgrid‐scale Cloud CondensationCloud DynamicUniform Ccn DistributionRadiation MeasurementCloud PhysicClimate DynamicsAtmospheric ProcessPrescribed Ccn Distribution
Subgrid‐scale cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) heterogeneity is not represented in global climate models (GCM) and potentially contributes systematic errors to simulated cloud effects. High‐resolution WRF‐Chem model simulations were performed to investigate the impact of assuming a uniform CCN distribution on cloud properties and surface radiation over a region the size of a GCM grid column. Results indicate that a prescribed CCN distribution allowing for vertical and temporal fluctuations does substantially better in simulating cloud properties and radiative effects than does a prescribed uniform and constant CCN distribution. Spatially and temporally averaged net effects on downwelling shortwave radiation are between −3 and −11 W m −2 for the fluctuating and uniform distributions, respectively, versus a control simulation with fully interactive aerosols. Both prescribed CCN distributions produce optically thicker clouds more often than the control, with the mean cloud optical depth increasing by over 25% when using the uniform and constant CCN distribution.
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