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Process‐Based Simulation of Aerosol‐Cloud Interactions in a One‐Dimensional Cirrus Model
Author(s) -
Kärcher B.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of geophysical research: atmospheres
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2169-8996
pISSN - 2169-897X
DOI - 10.1029/2019jd031847
Subject(s) - cirrus , ice crystals , supersaturation , ice nucleus , atmospheric sciences , nucleation , clear ice , cloud physics , aerosol , turbulent diffusion , sea ice growth processes , environmental science , water vapor , turbulence , materials science , chemical physics , meteorology , chemistry , physics , thermodynamics , cloud computing , sea ice thickness , arctic ice pack , sea ice , antarctic sea ice , computer science , operating system
A new microphysical cirrus model to simulate ice crystal nucleation, depositional growth, and gravitational settling is described. The model tracks individual simulation ice particles in a vertical column of air and allows moisture and heat profiles to be affected by turbulent diffusion. Ice crystal size‐ and supersaturation‐dependent deposition coefficients are employed in a one‐dimensional model framework. This enables the detailed simulation of microphysical feedbacks influencing the outcome of ice nucleation processes in cirrus. The use of spheroidal water vapor fluxes enables the prediction of primary ice crystal shapes once microscopic models describing the vapor uptake on the surfaces of cirrus ice crystals are better constrained. Two applications addressing contrail evolution and cirrus formation demonstrate the potential of the model for advanced studies of aerosol‐cirrus interactions. It is shown that supersaturation in, and microphysical and optical properties of, cirrus are affected by variable deposition coefficients. Vertical variability in ice supersaturation, ice crystal sedimentation, and high turbulent diffusivity all tend to decrease homogeneously nucleated ice number mixing ratios over time, but low ice growth efficiencies counteract this tendency. Vertical mixing induces a tendency to delay the onset of homogeneous freezing. In situations of sustained large‐scale cooling, natural cirrus clouds may often form in air surrounding persistent contrails.

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