scholarly journals Microphysical and Radiative Effects of Ice Clouds on Tropical Equilibrium States: A Two-Dimensional Cloud-Resolving Modeling Study

2007 ◽  
Vol 135 (7) ◽  
pp. 2794-2802 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fan Ping ◽  
Zhexian Luo ◽  
Xiaofan Li

Abstract The microphysical and radiative effects of ice clouds on tropical equilibrium states are investigated based on three two-dimensional cloud-resolving simulations imposed by zero vertical velocity and time-invariant zonal wind and sea surface temperature. An experiment without ice microphysics (ice microphysical and radiative effects; C00), another experiment without ice radiative effects (CI0), and the control experiment (CIR) are carried out. The model with cyclic lateral boundaries is integrated for 40 days to reach equilibrium states in all experiments. CI0 produces a colder and drier equilibrium state than CIR and C00 do through generating a larger IR cooling, a larger vapor condensation rate, and consuming a larger amount of water vapor. A larger surface rain rate occurs in CI0 than in CIR and C00. The ice radiative effects on thermodynamic equilibrium states are stronger than the ice microphysical effects so that the exclusion of ice microphysics yields a colder and drier equilibrium state in C00 than in CIR. The ice radiative effects and the ice microphysical effects on surface rainfall processes are largely offset, which leads to similar zonal-mean surface rain rates in C00 and CIR.

2007 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 656-664 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shouting Gao ◽  
Yushu Zhou ◽  
Xiaofan Li

Abstract Effects of diurnal variations on tropical heat and water vapor equilibrium states are investigated based on hourly data from two-dimensional cloud-resolving simulations. The model is integrated for 40 days and the simulations reach equilibrium states in all experiments. The simulation with a time-invariant solar zenith angle produces a colder and drier equilibrium state than does the simulation with a diurnally varied solar zenith angle. The simulation with a diurnally varied sea surface temperature generates a colder equilibrium state than does the simulation with a time-invariant sea surface temperature. Mass-weighted mean temperature and precipitable water budgets are analyzed to explain the thermodynamic differences. The simulation with the time-invariant solar zenith angle produces less solar heating, more condensation, and consumes more moisture than the simulation with the diurnally varied solar zenith angle. The simulation with the diurnally varied sea surface temperature produces a colder temperature through less latent heating and more IR cooling than the simulation with the time-invariant sea surface temperature.


2006 ◽  
Vol 134 (10) ◽  
pp. 3015-3024 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shouting Gao ◽  
Lingkun Ran ◽  
Xiaofan Li

Abstract The effects of ice microphysics on rainfall and thermodynamic processes in the tropical deep convective regime are examined based on hourly zonal-mean data from a pair of two-dimensional cloud-resolving simulations: one simulation with ice clouds and the other without ice clouds. The model is integrated for 21 days with the imposed large-scale vertical velocity, zonal wind, and horizontal advections obtained from the Tropical Ocean Global Atmosphere Coupled Ocean–Atmosphere Response Experiment. The experiment without ice clouds produces a larger amount of cloud water and a smaller surface rain rate than the experiment with ice clouds because of the exclusion of vapor deposition processes in the experiment without ice clouds. The experiment without ice clouds produces cold and moist states simply because it generates a smaller cloud heating rate and consumes a smaller amount of vapor than does the experiment with ice clouds.


2000 ◽  
Vol 63 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Graner ◽  
Y. Jiang ◽  
E. Janiaud ◽  
C. Flament

2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (16) ◽  
pp. 12105-12121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thomas Fauchez ◽  
Steven Platnick ◽  
Tamás Várnai ◽  
Kerry Meyer ◽  
Céline Cornet ◽  
...  

Abstract. In a context of global climate change, the understanding of the radiative role of clouds is crucial. On average, ice clouds such as cirrus have a significant positive radiative effect, but under some conditions the effect may be negative. However, many uncertainties remain regarding the role of ice clouds on Earth's radiative budget and in a changing climate. Global satellite observations are particularly well suited to monitoring clouds, retrieving their characteristics and inferring their radiative impact. To retrieve ice cloud properties (optical thickness and ice crystal effective size), current operational algorithms assume that each pixel of the observed scene is plane-parallel and homogeneous, and that there is no radiative connection between neighboring pixels. Yet these retrieval assumptions are far from accurate, as real radiative transfer is 3-D. This leads to the plane-parallel and homogeneous bias (PPHB) plus the independent pixel approximation bias (IPAB), which impacts both the estimation of top-of-the-atmosphere (TOA) radiation and the retrievals. An important factor that determines the impact of these assumptions is the sensor spatial resolution. High-spatial-resolution pixels can better represent cloud variability (low PPHB), but the radiative path through the cloud can involve many pixels (high IPAB). In contrast, low-spatial-resolution pixels poorly represent the cloud variability (high PPHB), but the radiation is better contained within the pixel field of view (low IPAB). In addition, the solar and viewing geometry (as well as cloud optical properties) can modulate the magnitude of the PPHB and IPAB. In this, Part II of our study, we simulate TOA 0.86 and 2.13 µm solar reflectances over a cirrus uncinus scene produced by the 3DCLOUD model. Then, 3-D radiative transfer simulations are performed with the 3DMCPOL code at spatial resolutions ranging from 50 m to 10 km, for 12 viewing geometries and nine solar geometries. It is found that, for simulated nadir observations taken at resolution higher than 2.5 km, horizontal radiation transport (HRT) dominates biases between 3-D and 1-D reflectance calculations, but these biases are mitigated by the side illumination and shadowing effects for off-zenith solar geometries. At resolutions coarser than 2.5 km, PPHB dominates. For off-nadir observations at resolutions higher than 2.5 km, the effect that we call THEAB (tilted and homogeneous extinction approximation bias) due to the oblique line of sight passing through many cloud columns contributes to a large increase of the reflectances, but 3-D radiative effects such as shadowing and side illumination for oblique Sun are also important. At resolutions coarser than 2.5 km, the PPHB is again the dominant effect. The magnitude and resolution dependence of PPHB and IPAB is very different for visible, near-infrared and shortwave infrared channels compared with the thermal infrared channels discussed in Part I of this study. The contrast of 3-D radiative effects between solar and thermal infrared channels may be a significant issue for retrieval techniques that simultaneously use radiative measurements across a wide range of solar reflectance and infrared wavelengths.


1984 ◽  
Vol 106 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. H. Lee ◽  
J. M. Mansour

The applicability of a linear systems analysis of two-dimensional swing leg motion was investigated. Two different linear systems were developed. A linear time-varying system was developed by linearizing the nonlinear equations describing swing leg motion about a set of nominal system and control trajectories. Linear time invariant systems were developed by linearizing about three different fixed limb positions. Simulations of swing leg motion were performed with each of these linear systems. These simulations were compared to previously performed nonlinear simulations of two-dimensional swing leg motion and the actual subject motion. Additionally, a linear system analysis was used to gain some insight into the interdependency of the state variables and controls. It was shown that the linear time varying approximation yielded an accurate representation of limb motion for the thigh and shank but with diminished accuracy for the foot. In contrast, all the linear time invariant systems, if used to simulate more than a quarter of the swing phase, yielded generally inaccurate results for thigh shank and foot motion.


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