Turbulence-induced broadening of cloud droplet size distributions: implications for aerosol indirect effects

ORAL

Abstract

The optical properties and precipitation efficiency of warm clouds depend on the droplet size distribution and its moments, including the statistical relative-dispersion of the distribution. Cloud droplet growth in a turbulent environment is studied by creating turbulent moist Rayleigh-B{\'{e}}nard convection in a laboratory chamber (the Pi Chamber) and a parallel LES with (bin) cloud-microphysics. Cloud formation is achieved by injecting aerosols into the water-supersaturated environment created by the isobaric mixing of saturated air at different temperatures. A range of steady-state cloud droplet number concentrations is achieved by supplying aerosols at different rates. The results reveal a surprising role of turbulence in cloud droplet formation and growth that can be understood as occurring in two regimes: a polluted cloud regime ($Da \gg 1$) in which thermodynamic conditions are rather uniform and cloud droplet sizes are similar, and a clean cloud regime ($Da \ll 1$) in which thermodynamic conditions are highly variable and cloud droplet sizes are very diverse. The narrowing of the cloud droplet size distribution under polluted conditions introduces a new stabilizing factor by which increased aerosol concentration can suppress precipitation and enhance cloud brightness.

*This research was supported by NSF grant AGS-1623429

Authors

  • Raymond Shaw

    • Michigan Tecj
    • Michigan Technological University
    • Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI
    • Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI, USA
  • W. Cantrell

    • Michigan Technological University
    • Michigan Technological University, Houghton, MI
  • Kamal Kant Chandrakar

    • Michigan Technological University
  • Greg Kinney

    • Michigan Technological University
  • Mikhail Ovchinnikov

    • Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
  • Subin Thomas

    • Michigan Technological University
  • Fan Yang

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory