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Scaling of Drizzle Virga Depth With Cloud Thickness for Marine Stratocumulus Clouds
Author(s) -
Yang Fan,
Luke Edward P.,
Kollias Pavlos,
Kostinski Alex B.,
Vogelmann Andrew M.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
geophysical research letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.007
H-Index - 273
eISSN - 1944-8007
pISSN - 0094-8276
DOI - 10.1029/2018gl077145
Subject(s) - drizzle , marine stratocumulus , environmental science , cloud top , atmospheric sciences , meteorology , cloud base , cloud computing , precipitation , aerosol , physics , satellite , astronomy , computer science , operating system
Drizzle is frequently observed in marine stratocumulus clouds and plays a crucial role in cloud lifetime and the radiation budget. Most drizzling stratocumulus clouds form drizzle virga below cloud base, where subcloud scavenging and evaporative cooling are important. We use unique ground‐based cloud radar observations (1) to examine the statistical properties of drizzle frequency and virga depth and (2) to test a simple analytical relationship derived between drizzle virga thickness ( H v ) and cloud thickness ( H c ). Observations show that 83% of marine stratocumulus clouds are drizzling although only 31% generate surface precipitation. The analytical expression for H v is derived as a function of H c and subcloud relative humidity considering in‐cloud accretion and subcloud evaporation of drizzle drops. The derived third‐order power law relationship,H v ∼ H c 3 , shows good agreement with long‐term observational data. Our formula provides a simple parameterization for drizzle virga of stratocumulus clouds suitable for use in models.