Aerosol removal and cloud collapse accelerated by supersaturation fluctuations in turbulence

K. K. Chandrakar, W. Cantrell, D. Ciochetto, S. Karki, G. Kinney, R. A. Shaw

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

36 Scopus citations

Abstract

Prior observations have documented the process of cloud cleansing, through which cloudy, polluted air from a continent is slowly transformed into cloudy, clean air typical of a maritime environment. During that process, cloud albedo changes gradually, followed by a sudden reduction in cloud fraction and albedo as drizzle forms and convection changes from closed to open cellular. Experiments in a cloud chamber that generates a turbulent environment show a similar cloud cleansing process followed by rapid cloud collapse. Observations of (1) cloud droplet size distribution, (2) interstitial aerosol size distribution, (3) cloud droplet residual size distribution, and (4) water vapor supersaturation are all consistent with the hypothesis that turbulent fluctuations of supersaturation accelerate the cloud cleansing process and eventual cloud collapse. Decay of the interstitial aerosol concentration occurs slowly at first then more rapidly. The accelerated cleansing occurs when the cloud phase relaxation time exceeds the turbulence correlation time.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4359-4367
Number of pages9
JournalGeophysical Research Letters
Volume44
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - May 16 2017

Keywords

  • aerosol indirect effects
  • aerosol-cloud interactions
  • cloud cleansing

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