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Radar/lidar observations of boundary layer clouds
Ewan O’Connor, Robin Hogan, Anthony Illingworth, Nicolas Gaussiat
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Overview Radar and lidar can measure boundary layer clouds at high resolution: Cloud boundaries - radar and lidar LWP – microwave radiometer LWC – cloud boundaries and LWP Cloudnet – compare forecast models and observations 3 remote-sensing sites (currently), 6 models (currently) Cloud fraction, liquid water content statistics Microphysical profiles: Water vapour mixing ratio - Raman lidar LWC - dual-wavelength radar Drizzle properties - Doppler radar and lidar Drop concentration and size – radar and lidar
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Vertically pointing radar and lidar
Radar: Z~D6 Sensitive to larger particles (drizzle, rain) Lidar: b~D2 Sensitive to small particles (droplets, aerosol)
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Statistics - liquid water clouds
2 year database Use lidar to detect liquid cloud base Low liquid water clouds present 23% of the time (above 400 m) Summer: 25% Winter: 20% Use radar to determine presence of “drizzle” 46% of clouds detected by lidar contain occasional large droplets Summer: 42% Winter: 52 %
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Dual wavelength microwave radiometer
Brightness temperatures -> Liquid water path Improved technique – Nicolas Gaussiat Use lidar to determine whether clear sky or not Adjust coefficients to account for instrument drift Removes offset for low LWP LWP - initial LWP - lidar corrected
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LWC - Scaled adiabatic method
Use lidar/radar to determine cloud boundaries Use model to estimate adiabatic gradient of lwc Scale adiabatic lwc profile to match lwp from radiometers
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Compare measured lwp to adiabatic lwp
obtain ‘dilution coefficient’ Dilution coefficient versus depth of cloud
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Stratocumulus liquid water content
Problem of using radar to infer liquid water content: Very different moments of a bimodal size distribution: LWC dominated by ~10 m cloud droplets Radar reflectivity often dominated by drizzle drops ~200 mm An alternative is to use dual-frequency radar Radar attenuation proportional to LWC, increases with frequency Therefore rate of change with height of the difference in 35-GHz and 94-GHz yields LWC with no size assumptions necessary Each 1 dB difference corresponds to an LWP of ~120 g m-2 Can be difficult to implement in practice Need very precise Z measurements Typically several minutes of averaging is required Need linear response throughout dynamic range of both radars
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Drizzle below cloud Doppler radar and lidar - 4 observables (O’Connor et al. 2005) Radar/lidar ratio provides information on particle size
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Drizzle below cloud Retrieve three components of drizzle DSD (N, D, μ). Can then calculate LWC, LWF and vertical air velocity, w.
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Drizzle below cloud Typical cell size is about 2-3 km
Updrafts correlate well with liquid water flux
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Profiles of lwc – no drizzle
Examine radar/lidar profiles - retrieve LWC, N, D
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Profiles of lwc – no drizzle
260 cm-3 90 cm-3 80 cm-3 Consistency shown between LWP estimates.
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Profiles of lwc – no drizzle
Cloud droplet sizes <12μm no drizzle present Cloud droplet sizes 18 μm drizzle present Agrees with Tripoli & Cotton (1980) critical size threshold
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Conclusion Relevant Sc properties can be measured using remote sensing; Ideally utilise radar, lidar and microwave radiometer measurements together. Cloudnet project provides yearly/monthly statistics for cloud fraction and liquid water content including comparisons between observations and models. Soon - number concentration and size, drizzle properties. Humidity structure, turbulence. Satellite measurements A-Train (Cloudsat + Calipso + Aqua) EarthCARE IceSat
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Importance of Stratocumulus
Most common cloud type globally Global coverage 26% Ocean 34% Land 18% Average net radiative effect is about –65 W m-2 Cooling effect on climate Mean annual low cloud amount – ISCCP
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Cloud Parameters Use radar and lidar to provide vertical profiles of:
Cloud droplet size distribution (N, mean D, broad/narrow) Drizzle droplet size distribution (N, mean D, broad/narrow) Relate drizzle to cloud N Is stratocumulus adiabatic? Entrainment rates
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Data
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Drizzle-free stratocumulus
Z = ND6 & LWC ND3 Z LWC2/N Assume adiabatic ascent and constant N LWC increases linearly with height (z) If we know T and p dLWC /dz Assume dLWC /dz is a constant, a LWC(z) = az Z(z) (az)2 / N Adiabatic profile: Z should vary as z2
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Aircraft data - ACE 2 Brenguier et al. (2000) 1005 UTC 1545 UTC Reflectivity profiles
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Refined technique Nad Allow dilution from adiabatic profile of LWC
LWC(z) = k LWCad(z) N = k Nad D(z) = Dad(z) Z(z) k (az)2 / Nad Nad
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Plots of N High N, small D low Z Nad = 264 cm-3
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Plots of N Nad = 91 cm-3
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Plots of N Nad = 82 cm-3
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Presence of drizzle can lead to an overestimate of N
an overestimate of LWC (and LWP)
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Conclusion Consistency shown between LWP estimates from this technique, and from microwave radiometers. Additional techniques to investigate Sc are also available: Doppler radar/lidar – Drizzle properties (O’Connor et al. 2004) Dual wavelength radar – LWC profile (Gaussiat et al.) Doppler spectra Raman humidity measurements – WV structure, mixed layer depths Aircraft verification? CloudNet – 3 years, 3 sites, provide climatology of Sc properties
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Dual wavelength microwave radiometer
Brightness temperatures -> Liquid water path Improved technique – Nicolas Gaussiat Use lidar to determine whether clear sky or not Adjust coefficients to account for instrument drift Removes offset for low LWP LWP - initial LWP - lidar corrected
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LWC - Scaled adiabatic method
Use lidar/radar to determine cloud boundaries Use model to estimate adiabatic gradient of lwc Scale adiabatic lwc profile to match lwp from radiometers
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Compare measured lwp to adiabatic lwp
obtain ‘dilution coefficient’ Dilution coefficient versus depth of cloud
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Stratocumulus liquid water content
Problem of using radar to infer liquid water content: Very different moments of a bimodal size distribution: LWC dominated by ~10 m cloud droplets Radar reflectivity often dominated by drizzle drops ~200 mm An alternative is to use dual-frequency radar Radar attenuation proportional to LWC, increases with frequency Therefore rate of change with height of the difference in 35-GHz and 94-GHz yields LWC with no size assumptions necessary Each 1 dB difference corresponds to an LWP of ~120 g m-2 Can be difficult to implement in practice Need very precise Z measurements Typically several minutes of averaging is required Need linear response throughout dynamic range of both radars
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Drizzle below cloud Doppler radar and lidar - 4 observables (O’Connor et al. 2005) Radar/lidar ratio provides information on particle size
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Drizzle below cloud Retrieve three components of drizzle DSD (N, D, μ). Can then calculate LWC, LWF and vertical air velocity, w.
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Drizzle below cloud Typical cell size is about 2-3 km
Updrafts correlate well with liquid water flux
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Profiles of lwc – no drizzle
Examine radar/lidar profiles - retrieve LWC, N, D
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Profiles of lwc – no drizzle
260 cm-3 90 cm-3 80 cm-3 Consistency shown between LWP estimates.
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Profiles of lwc – no drizzle
Cloud droplet sizes <12μm no drizzle present Cloud droplet sizes 18 μm drizzle present Agrees with Tripoli & Cotton (1980) critical size threshold
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