EGU22-5119
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-5119
EGU General Assembly 2022
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Occurrence patterns of cloud particles sizes in cirrus and mixed-phase clouds

Martina Krämer1,2, Spelten Nicole1, Afchine Armin1, and Spang Reinhold1
Martina Krämer et al.
  • 1Research Center Jülich, Institute for Energy and Climate Research 7: Stratosphere (IEK-7), Jülich, Germany (m.kraemer@fz-juelich.de)
  • 2Johannes Gutenberg University, Institute for Atmospheric Physics (IPA), Mainz, Germany

The sizes and number of cloud particles are crucial parameters that determine the physical and optical properties of clouds and with that their radiative feedback to climate. However, measurements of cloud particle size distributions (PSDs) are difficult to accomplish, because clouds are always located at a certain height in the atmosphere. In addition, the entire cloud particle size range cannot be covered with one instrument and also, an undisturbed sampling cloud particles across their entire size range has only been successful for about 15 years.
To build a larger data set of cloud PSDs, we have merged PSD measurements from 11 airborne field campaigns between 2008 and 2021 in tropical, mid-latitude and Arctic ice, mixed and liquid clouds, where we spend a total of 238 hours of measurement time in clouds during 163 flights, of which 131 hours in ice clouds, 62 hours in mixed clouds and 45 hours in liquid clouds. The cloud PSDs are from different instruments which do not
record particle sizes in equally sized intervals. Therefore, the cloud particle numbers are interpolated to a logarithmic equidistant size grid. From this synchronized data set it is now possible to derive not only averaged PSDs, but occurrence frequencies of particle sizes and numbers. We will present occurrence patterns of particle sizes and concentrations in mixed-phase and cirrus clouds in 10°C temperature intervals between -90 to 0°C.           

                                                

                                                                                      Cloud PSD heatmaps of cirrus and mixed phase clouds.

In this study we will also present  more detailed analyses of cirrus clouds by sorting the PSDs in three ranges of ice water content and temperatures, respectively. First results show that in thin cirrus - which are mostly of in-situ origin- the dominant ice particle size changes from small ice particles at low temperatures (~3-20μm diameter) to larger sizes in warmer cirrus (~20–200μm diameter). Thick cirrus, which are a mixture of in-situ and liquid origin, generally contain larger ice particles at all temperatures, the warmer the temperature, the larger ice particles appear in the PSDs.
These occurrence patterns of cloud particle sizes represent a valuable data set that can be used to validate and improve the representation of especially ice clouds in global climate models and in the  retrieval of satelllite-based remote sensing observations.

Accompanying presentations @ EGU 2022, AS 1.15:
– Spang, R., Krämer, M. and Spelten, N.: A database of microphysical and optical properties of
   thin to thick cirrus clouds derived from bimodal particle size distributions.
– Bartolome Garcia, I., O. Sourdeval, M. Krämer, R. Spang: Parametrization of in-situ cloud particle
   size distributions including small particles.

How to cite: Krämer, M., Nicole, S., Armin, A., and Reinhold, S.: Occurrence patterns of cloud particles sizes in cirrus and mixed-phase clouds, EGU General Assembly 2022, Vienna, Austria, 23–27 May 2022, EGU22-5119, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-5119, 2022.

Displays

Display file