Premium
The Response of Simulated Arctic Mixed‐Phase Stratocumulus to Sea Ice Cover Variability in the Absence of Large‐Scale Advection
Author(s) -
Li Zhujun,
Xu KuanMan,
Cheng Anning
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1002/2017jd027086
Subject(s) - sea ice , environmental science , sea ice thickness , arctic ice pack , boundary layer , atmospheric sciences , cloud cover , advection , ice albedo feedback , sea ice concentration , sea ice growth processes , arctic , climatology , geology , oceanography , cloud computing , mechanics , physics , computer science , thermodynamics , operating system
This study examines the responses of Arctic mixed‐phase stratocumulus boundary layer to sea ice cover variability near the sea ice margins using large eddy simulations. The simulations are conducted for two different atmospheric conditions, based on observations from the Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic Ocean Experiment (SHEBA) (100% sea ice‐covered) and the Mixed‐Phase Arctic Cloud Experiment (M‐PACE) (open ocean). The effect of sea ice cover variability is investigated for both atmospheric conditions by conducting a series of simulations prescribed with varying amounts of sea ice cover and no large‐scale advection. As sea ice cover amount decreases, the SHEBA boundary layer deepens and becomes decoupled. The relative strength of turbulence driven by surface heating to that driven by cloud top radiative cooling increases. Cloud ice and snow grow more efficiently than cloud liquid with moisture transported from the lower boundary layer. On the other hand, as sea ice cover amount increases, the M‐PACE boundary layer becomes shallower and more coupled with the surface as turbulence mainly driven by cloud top radiative cooling. Moisture supply from the surface is reduced, while cloud droplets are generated from turbulence at cloud top with little ice formation. In both atmospheric conditions, the boundary layer turbulence structure is modified according to change in the relative strength of boundary layer turbulent sources as sea ice amount changes, resulting in the growth/decay of the cloud layer. Simulations with smaller sea ice cover amounts are associated with more cloud ice but not necessarily more cloud liquid.