Abstract
Abstract. Convective clouds are common and play a major role in Earth's water cycle and energy balance; they may even develop into storms and cause severe
rainfall events. To understand the convective cloud development process, this study investigates the impact of aerosols on convective clouds by
considering the influence of both topography and diurnal variation in radiation. By combining texture analysis, clustering, and thresholding methods,
we identify all convective clouds in two warm seasons (May–September, 2016/17) in eastern China based on Himawari-8 Level 1 data. Having large
diurnally resolved cloud data together with surface meteorological and environmental measurements, we investigate convective cloud properties and
their variation, stratified by elevation and diurnal change. We then analyze the potential impact of aerosol on convective clouds under different
meteorological conditions and topographies. In general, convective clouds tend to occur preferentially under polluted conditions in the morning,
which reverses in the afternoon. Convective cloud fraction first increases then decreases with aerosol loading, which may contribute to this
phenomenon. Topography and diurnal meteorological variations may affect the strength of aerosol microphysical and radiative effects. Updraft is
always stronger along the windward slopes of mountains and plateaus, especially in northern China. The prevailing southerly wind near the foothills
of mountains and plateaus is likely to contribute to this windward strengthening of updraft and to bring more pollutant into the mountains, thereby
strengthening the microphysical effect, invigorating convective clouds. By comparison, over plain, aerosols decrease surface heating and suppress
convection by blocking solar radiation reaching the surface.
Funder
China Scholarship Council
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