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Cloud drop number concentrations over the western North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors

Cloud drop number concentrations (N(d)) over the western North Atlantic Ocean (WNAO) are generally highest during the winter (DJF) and lowest in summer (JJA), in contrast to aerosol proxy variables (aerosol optical depth, aerosol index, surface aerosol mass concentrations, surface cloud condensation...

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Autores principales: Dadashazar, Hossein, Painemal, David, Alipanah, Majid, Brunke, Michael, Chellappan, Seethala, Corral, Andrea F., Crosbie, Ewan, Kirschler, Simon, Liu, Hongyu, Moore, Richard H., Robinson, Claire, Scarino, Amy Jo, Shook, Michael, Sinclair, Kenneth, Thornhill, K. Lee, Voigt, Christiane, Wang, Hailong, Winstead, Edward, Zeng, Xubin, Ziemba, Luke, Zuidema, Paquita, Sorooshian, Armin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8350960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34377145
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-10499-2021
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author Dadashazar, Hossein
Painemal, David
Alipanah, Majid
Brunke, Michael
Chellappan, Seethala
Corral, Andrea F.
Crosbie, Ewan
Kirschler, Simon
Liu, Hongyu
Moore, Richard H.
Robinson, Claire
Scarino, Amy Jo
Shook, Michael
Sinclair, Kenneth
Thornhill, K. Lee
Voigt, Christiane
Wang, Hailong
Winstead, Edward
Zeng, Xubin
Ziemba, Luke
Zuidema, Paquita
Sorooshian, Armin
author_facet Dadashazar, Hossein
Painemal, David
Alipanah, Majid
Brunke, Michael
Chellappan, Seethala
Corral, Andrea F.
Crosbie, Ewan
Kirschler, Simon
Liu, Hongyu
Moore, Richard H.
Robinson, Claire
Scarino, Amy Jo
Shook, Michael
Sinclair, Kenneth
Thornhill, K. Lee
Voigt, Christiane
Wang, Hailong
Winstead, Edward
Zeng, Xubin
Ziemba, Luke
Zuidema, Paquita
Sorooshian, Armin
author_sort Dadashazar, Hossein
collection PubMed
description Cloud drop number concentrations (N(d)) over the western North Atlantic Ocean (WNAO) are generally highest during the winter (DJF) and lowest in summer (JJA), in contrast to aerosol proxy variables (aerosol optical depth, aerosol index, surface aerosol mass concentrations, surface cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentrations) that generally peak in spring (MAM) and JJA with minima in DJF. Using aircraft, satellite remote sensing, ground-based in situ measurement data, and reanalysis data, we characterize factors explaining the divergent seasonal cycles and furthermore probe into factors influencing N(d) on seasonal timescales. The results can be summarized well by features most pronounced in DJF, including features associated with cold-air outbreak (CAO) conditions such as enhanced values of CAO index, planetary boundary layer height (PBLH), low-level liquid cloud fraction, and cloud-top height, in addition to winds aligned with continental outflow. Data sorted into high- and low-N(d) days in each season, especially in DJF, revealed that all of these conditions were enhanced on the high-N(d) days, including reduced sea level pressure and stronger wind speeds. Although aerosols may be more abundant in MAM and JJA, the conditions needed to activate those particles into cloud droplets are weaker than in colder months, which is demonstrated by calculations of the strongest (weakest) aerosol indirect effects in DJF (JJA) based on comparing N(d) to perturbations in four different aerosol proxy variables (total and sulfate aerosol optical depth, aerosol index, surface mass concentration of sulfate). We used three machine learning models and up to 14 input variables to infer about most influential factors related to N(d) for DJF and JJA, with the best performance obtained with gradient-boosted regression tree (GBRT) analysis. The model results indicated that cloud fraction was the most important input variable, followed by some combination (depending on season) of CAO index and surface mass concentrations of sulfate and organic carbon. Future work is recommended to further understand aspects uncovered here such as impacts of free tropospheric aerosol entrainment on clouds, degree of boundary layer coupling, wet scavenging, and giant CCN effects on aerosol–N(d) relationships, updraft velocity, and vertical structure of cloud properties such as adiabaticity that impact the satellite estimation of N(d).
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spelling pubmed-83509602021-08-09 Cloud drop number concentrations over the western North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors Dadashazar, Hossein Painemal, David Alipanah, Majid Brunke, Michael Chellappan, Seethala Corral, Andrea F. Crosbie, Ewan Kirschler, Simon Liu, Hongyu Moore, Richard H. Robinson, Claire Scarino, Amy Jo Shook, Michael Sinclair, Kenneth Thornhill, K. Lee Voigt, Christiane Wang, Hailong Winstead, Edward Zeng, Xubin Ziemba, Luke Zuidema, Paquita Sorooshian, Armin Atmos Chem Phys Article Cloud drop number concentrations (N(d)) over the western North Atlantic Ocean (WNAO) are generally highest during the winter (DJF) and lowest in summer (JJA), in contrast to aerosol proxy variables (aerosol optical depth, aerosol index, surface aerosol mass concentrations, surface cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) concentrations) that generally peak in spring (MAM) and JJA with minima in DJF. Using aircraft, satellite remote sensing, ground-based in situ measurement data, and reanalysis data, we characterize factors explaining the divergent seasonal cycles and furthermore probe into factors influencing N(d) on seasonal timescales. The results can be summarized well by features most pronounced in DJF, including features associated with cold-air outbreak (CAO) conditions such as enhanced values of CAO index, planetary boundary layer height (PBLH), low-level liquid cloud fraction, and cloud-top height, in addition to winds aligned with continental outflow. Data sorted into high- and low-N(d) days in each season, especially in DJF, revealed that all of these conditions were enhanced on the high-N(d) days, including reduced sea level pressure and stronger wind speeds. Although aerosols may be more abundant in MAM and JJA, the conditions needed to activate those particles into cloud droplets are weaker than in colder months, which is demonstrated by calculations of the strongest (weakest) aerosol indirect effects in DJF (JJA) based on comparing N(d) to perturbations in four different aerosol proxy variables (total and sulfate aerosol optical depth, aerosol index, surface mass concentration of sulfate). We used three machine learning models and up to 14 input variables to infer about most influential factors related to N(d) for DJF and JJA, with the best performance obtained with gradient-boosted regression tree (GBRT) analysis. The model results indicated that cloud fraction was the most important input variable, followed by some combination (depending on season) of CAO index and surface mass concentrations of sulfate and organic carbon. Future work is recommended to further understand aspects uncovered here such as impacts of free tropospheric aerosol entrainment on clouds, degree of boundary layer coupling, wet scavenging, and giant CCN effects on aerosol–N(d) relationships, updraft velocity, and vertical structure of cloud properties such as adiabaticity that impact the satellite estimation of N(d). 2021-07-13 2021-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8350960/ /pubmed/34377145 http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-10499-2021 Text en https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle Article
Dadashazar, Hossein
Painemal, David
Alipanah, Majid
Brunke, Michael
Chellappan, Seethala
Corral, Andrea F.
Crosbie, Ewan
Kirschler, Simon
Liu, Hongyu
Moore, Richard H.
Robinson, Claire
Scarino, Amy Jo
Shook, Michael
Sinclair, Kenneth
Thornhill, K. Lee
Voigt, Christiane
Wang, Hailong
Winstead, Edward
Zeng, Xubin
Ziemba, Luke
Zuidema, Paquita
Sorooshian, Armin
Cloud drop number concentrations over the western North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors
title Cloud drop number concentrations over the western North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors
title_full Cloud drop number concentrations over the western North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors
title_fullStr Cloud drop number concentrations over the western North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors
title_full_unstemmed Cloud drop number concentrations over the western North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors
title_short Cloud drop number concentrations over the western North Atlantic Ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors
title_sort cloud drop number concentrations over the western north atlantic ocean: seasonal cycle, aerosol interrelationships, and other influential factors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8350960/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34377145
http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-10499-2021
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