Impact of vertical air motions on ice formation rate in mixed-phase cloud layers

Abstract

The relationship between vertical air velocity at cloud base and primary ice formation has been measured for shallow mixed-phase cloud layers (thickness <380 m) by means of ground-based cloud radar and Doppler lidar. For layers with a cloud-top temperature below −12 °C, an increase of vertical-velocity standard deviation from 0.1 to 1.0 m s−1 leads to an increase in the mass flux of ice water by two orders of magnitude. The cloud layers under study were selected in such a way that secondary ice-formation processes played a minor role, and primary ice formation was the dominant source of ice formation. Phenomenological parameterizations of the ice mass and the ice mass flux as functions of standard deviation of vertical air velocity are given.

Description
Keywords
ice water, mixed-phase cloud layers, ice mass flux
Citation
Bühl, J., Seifert, P., Engelmann, R., & Ansmann, A. (2019). Impact of vertical air motions on ice formation rate in mixed-phase cloud layers. 2(1). https://doi.org//10.1038/s41612-019-0092-6
License
CC BY 4.0 Unported