Clouds, Precipitation, and Marine Boundary Layer Structure during the MAGIC Field Campaign

被引:79
|
作者
Zhou, Xiaoli [1 ]
Kollias, Pavlos [1 ]
Lewis, Ernie R. [2 ]
机构
[1] McGill Univ, Dept Atmospher & Ocean Sci, Montreal, PQ, Canada
[2] Brookhaven Natl Lab, Biol Environm & Climate Sci Dept, Upton, NY 11973 USA
关键词
LOWER-TROPOSPHERIC STABILITY; STRATOCUMULUS CLOUDS; CUMULUS TRANSITION; VOCALS-REX; SIMULATION; ENTRAINMENT; MODELS; DEPTH; ASTEX;
D O I
10.1175/JCLI-D-14-00320.1
中图分类号
P4 [大气科学(气象学)];
学科分类号
0706 ; 070601 ;
摘要
The recent ship-based Marine ARM GCSS Pacific Cross-Section Intercomparison (GPCI) Investigation of Clouds (MAGIC) field campaign with the marine-capable Second ARM Mobile Facility (AMF2) deployed on the Horizon Lines cargo container M/V Spirit provided nearly 200 days of intraseasonal high-resolution observations of clouds, precipitation, and marine boundary layer (MBL) structure on multiple legs between Los Angeles, California, and Honolulu, Hawaii. During the deployment, MBL clouds exhibited a much higher frequency of occurrence than other cloud types and occurred more often in the warm season than in the cold season. MBL clouds demonstrated a propensity to produce precipitation, which often evaporated before reaching the ocean surface. The formation of stratocumulus is strongly correlated to a shallow MBL with a strong inversion and a weak transition, while cumulus formation is associated with a much weaker inversion and stronger transition. The estimated inversion strength is shown to depend seasonally on the potential temperature at 700 hPa. The location of the commencement of systematic MBL decoupling always occurred eastward of the locations of cloud breakup, and the systematic decoupling showed a strong moisture stratification. The entrainment of the dry warm air above the inversion appears to be the dominant factor triggering the systematic decoupling, while surface latent heat flux, precipitation, and diurnal circulation did not play major roles. MBL clouds broke up over a short spatial region due to the changes in the synoptic conditions, implying that in real atmospheric conditions the MBL clouds do not have enough time to evolve as in the idealized models.
引用
收藏
页码:2420 / 2442
页数:23
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] OBSERVATIONS OF THE INTERACTION BETWEEN CUMULUS CLOUDS AND WARM STRATOCUMULUS CLOUDS IN THE MARINE BOUNDARY-LAYER DURING ASTEX
    MARTIN, GM
    JOHNSON, DW
    ROGERS, DP
    JONAS, PR
    MINNIS, P
    HEGG, DA
    JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, 1995, 52 (16) : 2902 - 2922
  • [22] Distinctive aerosol-cloud-precipitation interactions in marine boundary layer clouds from the ACE-ENA and SOCRATES aircraft field campaigns
    Zheng, Xiaojian
    Dong, Xiquan
    Xi, Baike
    Logan, Timothy
    Wang, Yuan
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2024, 24 (18) : 10323 - 10347
  • [23] Observation of the spectrally invariant properties of clouds in cloudy-to-clear transition zones during the MAGIC field campaign
    Yang, Weidong
    Marshak, Alexander
    McBride, Patrick J.
    Chiu, J. Christine
    Knyazikhin, Yuri
    Schmidt, K. Sebastian
    Flynn, Connor
    Lewis, Ernie R.
    Eloranta, Edwin W.
    ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH, 2016, 182 : 294 - 301
  • [24] Multifrequency radar observations of marine clouds during the EPCAPE campaign
    Socuellamos, Juan M.
    Monje, Raquel Rodriguez
    Lebsock, Matthew D.
    Cooper, Ken B.
    Beauchamp, Robert M.
    Umeyama, Arturo
    EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCE DATA, 2024, 16 (06) : 2701 - 2715
  • [25] Southeast Pacific stratocumulus clouds, precipitation and boundary layer structure sampled along 20°S during VOCALS-REx
    Bretherton, C. S.
    Wood, R.
    George, R. C.
    Leon, D.
    Allen, G.
    Zheng, X.
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2010, 10 (21) : 10639 - 10654
  • [26] Modeling the Response of Marine Boundary Layer Clouds to Global Warming: The Impact of Subgrid-Scale Precipitation Formation
    Lauer, Axel
    Bennartz, Ralf
    Hamilton, Kevin
    Wang, Yuqing
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2012, 25 (19) : 6610 - 6626
  • [27] Global and regional modeling of clouds and aerosols in the marine boundary layer during VOCALS: the VOCA intercomparison
    Wyant, M. C.
    Bretherton, C. S.
    Wood, R.
    Carmichael, G. R.
    Clarke, A.
    Fast, J.
    George, R.
    Gustafson, W. I., Jr.
    Hannay, C.
    Lauer, A.
    Lin, Y.
    Morcrette, J-J
    Mulcahy, J.
    Saide, P. E.
    Spak, S. N.
    Yang, Q.
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2015, 15 (01) : 153 - 172
  • [28] Scaling Analysis of Temperature and Liquid Water Content in the Marine Boundary Layer Clouds during POST
    Ma, Yong-Feng
    Malinowski, Szymon P.
    Karpinska, Katarzyna
    Gerber, Hermann E.
    Kumala, Wojciech
    JOURNAL OF THE ATMOSPHERIC SCIENCES, 2017, 74 (12) : 4075 - 4092
  • [29] Turbulence structure of the Marine Atmospheric Boundary Layer during the SEMAPHORE experiment
    Lambert, D
    Durand, P
    Benech, B
    Druilhet, A
    Rechou, A
    12TH SYMPOSIUM ON BOUNDARY LAYERS AND TURBULENCE, 1997, : 44 - 45
  • [30] Mind the gap - Part 1: Accurately locating warm marine boundary layer clouds and precipitation using spaceborne radars
    Lamer, Katia
    Kollias, Pavlos
    Battaglia, Alessandro
    Preval, Simon
    ATMOSPHERIC MEASUREMENT TECHNIQUES, 2020, 13 (05) : 2363 - 2379