Important Ice Processes Are Missed by the Community Earth System Model in Southern Ocean Mixed‐Phase Clouds: Bridging SOCRATES Observations to Model Developments

Author:

Zhao Xi1ORCID,Liu Xiaohong1ORCID,Burrows Susannah2ORCID,DeMott Paul J.3ORCID,Diao Minghui4ORCID,McFarquhar Greg M.56ORCID,Patade Sachin7,Phillips Vaughan7,Roberts Greg C.8,Sanchez Kevin J.9ORCID,Shi Yang1ORCID,Zhang Meng10ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric Sciences Texas A&M University College Station TX USA

2. Atmospheric Sciences and Global Change Division Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland WA USA

3. Department of Atmospheric Science Colorado State University Fort Collins CO USA

4. Department of Meteorology and Climate Science San Jose State University San Jose CA USA

5. Cooperative Institute for Severe and High Impact Weather Research and Operations University of Oklahoma Norman OK USA

6. School of Meteorology University of Oklahoma Norman OK USA

7. Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science Lund University Lund Sweden

8. Scripps Institution of Oceanography University of California San Diego CA USA

9. Universities Space Research Association Columbia MD USA

10. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Livermore CA USA

Abstract

AbstractGlobal climate models (GCMs) are challenged by difficulties in simulating cloud phase and cloud radiative effect over the Southern Ocean (SO). Some of the new‐generation GCMs predict too much liquid and too little ice in mixed‐phase clouds. This misrepresentation of cloud phase in GCMs results in weaker negative cloud feedback over the SO and a higher climate sensitivity. Based on a model comparison with observational data obtained during the Southern Ocean Cloud Radiation and Aerosol Transport Experimental Study, this study addresses a key uncertainty in the Community Earth System Model version 2 (CESM2) related to cloud phase, namely ice formation in pristine remote SO clouds. It is found that sea spray organic aerosols (SSOAs) are the most important type of ice nucleating particles (INPs) over the SO with concentrations 1 order of magnitude higher than those of dust INPs based on measurements and CESM2 simulations. Secondary ice production (SIP) which includes riming splintering, rain droplet shattering, and ice‐ice collisional fragmentation as implemented in CESM2 is the dominant ice production process in moderately cold clouds with cloud temperatures greater than −20°C. SIP enhances the in‐cloud ice number concentrations (Ni) by 1–3 orders of magnitude and predicts more mixed‐phase (with percentage occurrence increased from 15% to 21%), in better agreement with the observations. This study highlights the importance of accurately representing the cloud phase over the pristine remote SO by considering the ice nucleation of SSOA and SIP processes, which are currently missing in most GCM cloud microphysics parameterizations.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

Association for the Sociology of Religion

National Science Foundation

Vetenskapsrådet

Office of Polar Programs

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),Atmospheric Science,Geophysics

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