Abstract |
Marine cold‐air outbreaks (MCAOs) are crucial for Arctic Ocean heat loss, featuring convective cloud rolls that transition into convection cells downstream. Understanding factors controlling this transformation is the key for improving MCAO cloud representation in climate models. This study employs large‐eddy simulations to investigate how cloud ice number concentrations () affect cloud evolution using a case from the Cold‐Air Outbreaks in the Marine Boundary Layer Experiment (COMBLE) campaign. The simulations, performed in a Lagrangian framework following an air mass trajectory, are driven by ERA5 reanalysis data. Initially, all simulations produce similar cloud patterns, but higher leads to earlier breakup of cloud rolls. Between 4 and 10 hr, surface precipitation rates are similar across simulations, but precipitation initiates earlier, and the cloud‐base precipitation rates are higher when is higher. The stronger precipitation evaporation leads to increased stability of the boundary layer and reduced intensity of vertical mixing between the surface and cloud layer. An increased sink of cloud layer moisture via precipitation and decreased source through diminished vertical transport result in earlier cloud breakup in higher conditions. Simulations with different sea surface temperatures (SST) indicate that this cloud breakup mechanism remains valid for MCAOs of different strengths, although the cloud organization is more sensitive to SST changes in low environments. This work highlights the importance of accurate representations of ice processes in simulating MCAO clouds and suggests the need for observational constraints of ice nucleating particles and over the mixed‐phase cloud regimes. |
Authors |
Peng Wu , Mikhail Ovchinnikov , Heng Xiao , Christian Philipp Lackner  , Bart Geerts  , Florian Tornow , Gregory S. Elsaesser
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Journal Info |
Wiley | Journal of Geophysical Research Atmospheres , vol: 130
, iss: 3
|
Publication Date |
2/6/2025 |
ISSN |
2169-897X |
Type |
article |
Open Access |
hybrid
|
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.1029/2024jd041282 |
Keywords |
Ice formation (Score: 0.504968) , Cold climate (Score: 0.41396314)
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