Publication | Open Access
Tropical cloud buoyancy is the same in a world with or without ice
16
Citations
29
References
2016
Year
EngineeringClimate ModelingAtmospheric ModelEarth ScienceTropical Cloud BuoyancyAtmospheric ScienceNumerical SimulationsLower AtmosphereClimate ChangeMeteorologyIce-water SystemAtmospheric IcingCloud DynamicGeographyRadiation MeasurementSea IceCryosphereCloud PhysicClimate DynamicsClimatologyMeteorological ForcingCloud Air
Abstract When convective clouds grow above the melting line, where temperatures fall below 0°C, condensed water begins to freeze and water vapor is deposited. These processes release the latent heat of fusion, which warms cloud air, and many previous studies have suggested that this heating from fusion increases cloud buoyancy in the upper troposphere. Here we use numerical simulations of radiative‐convective equilibrium with and without ice processes to argue that tropical cloud buoyancy is not systematically higher in a world with fusion than in a world without it. This insensitivity results from the fact that the environmental temperature profile encountered by developing tropical clouds is itself determined by convection. We also offer a simple explanation for the large reservoir of convective available potential energy in the tropical upper troposphere that does not invoke ice.
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