6533b85afe1ef96bd12ba02a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Cloud droplet formation at the base of tropical convective clouds: closure between modeling and measurement results of ACRIDICON–CHUVA

Manfred WendischMeinrat O. AndreaeMeinrat O. AndreaeRamon Campos BragaLuiz A. T. MachadoLuiz A. T. MachadoOvid O. KrügerAdrian WalserOliver LauerBarbara ErvensTina Jurkat-witschasDaniel SauerDaniel FüttererMira L. PöhlkerMira L. PöhlkerMira L. PöhlkerChristopher PöhlkerDaniel RosenfeldJan-david FörsterLianet Hernández PardoChristiane VoigtChristiane VoigtBruna A. HolandaUlrich Pöschl

subject

ConvectionAtmospheric ScienceRange (particle radiation)010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesSpectrometerPhysicsQC1-999Radiative forcingTropical Atlantic010502 geochemistry & geophysicsAtmospheric sciences01 natural sciencesCondensation particle counterAerosolChemistry13. Climate actionComputer Science::Programming LanguagesEnvironmental science[CHIM]Chemical Sciences14. Life underwaterAdiabatic processQD1-999Physics::Atmospheric and Oceanic Physics0105 earth and related environmental sciences

description

Aerosol–cloud interactions contribute to the large uncertainties in current estimates of climate forcing. We investigated the effect of aerosol particles on cloud droplet formation by model calculations and aircraft measurements over the Amazon and over the western tropical Atlantic during the ACRIDICON–CHUVA campaign in September 2014. On the HALO (High Altitude Long Range Research) research aircraft, cloud droplet number concentrations (Nd) were measured near the base of clean and polluted growing convective cumuli using a cloud combination probe (CCP) and a cloud and aerosol spectrometer (CAS-DPOL). An adiabatic parcel model was used to perform cloud droplet number closure studies for flights in differently polluted air masses. Model input parameters included aerosol size distributions measured with an ultra-high sensitive aerosol spectrometer (UHSAS), in combination with a condensation particle counter (CPC). Updraft velocities (w) were measured with a boom-mounted Rosemount probe. Over the continent, the aerosol size distributions were dominated by accumulation mode particles, and good agreement between measured and modeled Nd values was obtained (deviations ≲ 10 %) assuming an average hygroscopicity of κ∼0.1, which is consistent with Amazonian biomass burning and secondary organic aerosol. Above the ocean, fair agreement was obtained assuming an average hygroscopicity of κ∼0.2 (deviations ≲ 16 %) and further improvement was achieved assuming different hygroscopicities for Aitken and accumulation mode particles (κAit=0.8, κacc=0.2; deviations ≲ 10 %), which may reflect secondary marine sulfate particles. Our results indicate that Aitken mode particles and their hygroscopicity can be important for droplet formation at low pollution levels and high updraft velocities in tropical convective clouds.

10.5194/acp-21-17513-2021https://uca.hal.science/hal-03483611