The Secondary Production of Ice in Cumulus Experiment (SPICULE)

Author:

Lawson R. Paul11,Korolev Alexei V.22,DeMott Paul J.33,Heymsfield Andrew J.44,Bruintjes Roelof T.4,Wolff Cory A.4,Woods Sarah1,Patnaude Ryan J.3,Jensen Jørgen B.4,Moore Kathryn A.3,Heckman Ivan2,Rosky Elise55,Haggerty Julie4,Perkins Russell J.3,Fisher Ted1,Hill Thomas C. J.3

Affiliation:

1. SPEC Incorporated, Boulder, Colorado;

2. Environment and Climate Change Canada, North York, Ontario, Canada;

3. Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado;

4. National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado;

5. Michigan Technological University, Houghton, Michigan

Abstract

Abstract The secondary ice process (SIP) is a major microphysical process, which can result in rapid enhancement of ice particle concentration in the presence of preexisting ice. SPICULE was conducted to further investigate the effect of collision–coalescence on the rate of the fragmentation of freezing drop (FFD) SIP mechanism in cumulus congestus clouds. Measurements were conducted over the Great Plains and central United States from two coordinated aircraft, the NSF Gulfstream V (GV) and SPEC Learjet 35A, both equipped with state-of-the-art microphysical instrumentation and vertically pointing W- and Ka-band radars, respectively. The GV primarily targeted measurements of subcloud aerosols with subsequent sampling in warm cloud. Simultaneously, the Learjet performed multiple penetrations of the ascending cumulus congestus (CuCg) cloud top. First primary ice was typically detected at temperatures colder than −10°C, consistent with measured ice nucleating particles. Subsequent production of ice via FFD SIP was strongly related to the concentration of supercooled large drops (SLDs), with diameters from about 0.2 to a few millimeters. The concentration of SLDs is directly linked to the rate of collision–coalescence, which depends primarily on the subcloud aerosol size distribution and cloud-base temperature. SPICULE supports previous observational results showing that FFD SIP efficiency could be deduced from the product of cloud-base temperature and maximum diameter of drops measured ∼300 m above cloud base. However, new measurements with higher concentrations of aerosol and total cloud-base drop concentrations show an attenuating effect on the rate of coalescence. The SPICULE dataset provides rich material for validation of numerical schemes of collision–coalescence and SIP to improve weather prediction simulations

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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