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M. Thurai
,
V. N. Bringi
,
M. Szakáll
,
S. K. Mitra
,
K. V. Beard
, and
S. Borrmann

Abstract

Comparisons of drop shapes between measurements made using 2D video disdrometer (2DVD) and wind-tunnel experiments are presented. Comparisons are made in terms of the mean drop shapes and the axis ratio distributions. Very close agreement of the mean shapes is seen between the two sets of measurements; the same applies to the mean axis ratio versus drop diameter. Also, in both sets of measurements, an increase in the oscillation amplitudes with increasing drop diameter is observed. In the case of the 2DVD, a small increase in the skewness was also detected. Given that the two sets of measurements were conducted in very different conditions, the agreement between the two sets of data implies a certain “robustness” in the mean shape of oscillating drops that may be extended to natural raindrop oscillations, at least in steady rainfall and above the surface layer.

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F. Schröder
,
B. Kärcher
,
C. Duroure
,
J. Ström
,
A. Petzold
,
J.-F. Gayet
,
B. Strauss
,
P. Wendling
, and
S. Borrmann

Abstract

In situ observations of the microphysical properties of upper-tropospheric contrails and cirrus clouds have been performed during more than 15 airborne missions over central Europe. Experimental and technical aspects concerning in situ characterization of ice clouds with the help of optical and nonoptical detection methods (preferably FSSP-300 and Hallet-type replicator) are addressed. The development of contrails into cirrus clouds on the timescale of 1 h is discussed in terms of a representative set of number densities, and size distributions and surface area distributions of aerosols and cloud elements, with special emphasis on small ice crystals (diameter <20 μm). Contrails are dominated by high concentrations (>100 cm−3) of nearly spherical ice crystals with mean diameters in the range 1–10 μm. Young cirrus clouds, which mostly contain small regularly shaped ice crystals in the range 10–20-μm diameter and typical concentrations 2–5 cm−3, have been observed. Measurement results are compared to simple parcel model calculations to identify parameters relevant for the contrail–cirrus transition. Observations and model estimates suggest that contrail growth is only weakly, if at all, affected by preexisting cirrus clouds.

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A. Korolev
,
G. McFarquhar
,
P. R. Field
,
C. Franklin
,
P. Lawson
,
Z. Wang
,
E. Williams
,
S. J. Abel
,
D. Axisa
,
S. Borrmann
,
J. Crosier
,
J. Fugal
,
M. Krämer
,
U. Lohmann
,
O. Schlenczek
,
M. Schnaiter
, and
M. Wendisch

Abstract

Mixed-phase clouds represent a three-phase colloidal system consisting of water vapor, ice particles, and coexisting supercooled liquid droplets. Mixed-phase clouds are ubiquitous in the troposphere, occurring at all latitudes from the polar regions to the tropics. Because of their widespread nature, mixed-phase processes play critical roles in the life cycle of clouds, precipitation formation, cloud electrification, and the radiative energy balance on both regional and global scales. Yet, in spite of many decades of observations and theoretical studies, our knowledge and understanding of mixed-phase cloud processes remains incomplete. Mixed-phase clouds are notoriously difficult to represent in numerical weather prediction and climate models, and their description in theoretical cloud physics still presents complicated challenges. In this chapter, the current status of our knowledge on mixed-phase clouds, obtained from theoretical studies and observations, is reviewed. Recent progress, along with a discussion of problems and gaps in understanding the mixed-phase environment is summarized. Specific steps to improve our knowledge of mixed-phase clouds and their role in the climate and weather system are proposed.

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H.H. Jonsson
,
J.C. Wilson
,
C.A. Brock
,
R.G. Knollenberg
,
T.R. Newton
,
J.E. Dye
,
D. Baumgardner
,
S. Borrmann
,
G.V. Ferry
,
R. Pueschel
,
Dave C. Woods
, and
Mike C. Pitts

Abstract

A focused cavity aerosol spectrometer aboard a NASA ER-2 high-altitude aircraft provided high-resolution measurements of the size of the stratospheric particles in the 0.06–2.0-µm-diameter range in flights following the eruption of Mount Pinatubo in 1991. Effects of anisokinetic sampling and evaporation in the sampling system were accounted for by means adapted and specifically developed for this instrument. Calibrations with monodisperse aerosol particles provided the instrument's response matrix, which upon inversion during data reduction yielded the particle size distributions. The resultant dataset is internally consistent and generally shows agreement to within a factor of 2 with comparable measurements simultaneously obtained by a condensation nuclei counter, a forward-scattering spectrometer probe, and aerosol particle impactors, as well as with nearby extinction profiles obtained by satellite measurements and with lidar measurements of backscatter.

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D. Baumgardner
,
L. Avallone
,
A. Bansemer
,
S. Borrmann
,
P. Brown
,
U. Bundke
,
P. Y. Chuang
,
D. Cziczo
,
P. Field
,
M. Gallagher
,
J.-F. Gayet
,
A. Heymsfield
,
A. Korolev
,
M. Krämer
,
G. McFarquhar
,
S. Mertes
,
O. Möhler
,
S. Lance
,
P. Lawson
,
M. D. Petters
,
K. Pratt
,
G. Roberts
,
D. Rogers
,
O. Stetzer
,
J. Stith
,
W. Strapp
,
C. Twohy
, and
M. Wendisch

No abstract available.

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C. Flamant
,
P. Knippertz
,
A. H. Fink
,
A. Akpo
,
B. Brooks
,
C. J. Chiu
,
H. Coe
,
S. Danuor
,
M. Evans
,
O. Jegede
,
N. Kalthoff
,
A. Konaré
,
C. Liousse
,
F. Lohou
,
C. Mari
,
H. Schlager
,
A. Schwarzenboeck
,
B. Adler
,
L. Amekudzi
,
J. Aryee
,
M. Ayoola
,
A. M. Batenburg
,
G. Bessardon
,
S. Borrmann
,
J. Brito
,
K. Bower
,
F. Burnet
,
V. Catoire
,
A. Colomb
,
C. Denjean
,
K. Fosu-Amankwah
,
P. G. Hill
,
J. Lee
,
M. Lothon
,
M. Maranan
,
J. Marsham
,
R. Meynadier
,
J.-B. Ngamini
,
P. Rosenberg
,
D. Sauer
,
V. Smith
,
G. Stratmann
,
J. W. Taylor
,
C. Voigt
, and
V. Yoboué

Abstract

The European Union (EU)-funded project Dynamics–Aerosol–Chemistry–Cloud Interactions in West Africa (DACCIWA) investigates the relationship between weather, climate, and air pollution in southern West Africa—an area with rapid population growth, urbanization, and an increase in anthropogenic aerosol emissions. The air over this region contains a unique mixture of natural and anthropogenic gases, liquid droplets, and particles, emitted in an environment in which multilayer clouds frequently form. These exert a large influence on the local weather and climate, mainly owing to their impact on radiation, the surface energy balance, and thus the diurnal cycle of the atmospheric boundary layer.

In June and July 2016, DACCIWA organized a major international field campaign in Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, Benin, and Nigeria. Three supersites in Kumasi, Savè, and Ile-Ife conducted permanent measurements and 15 intensive observation periods. Three European aircraft together flew 50 research flights between 27 June and 16 July 2016, for a total of 155 h. DACCIWA scientists launched weather balloons several times a day across the region (772 in total), measured urban emissions, and evaluated health data. The main objective was to build robust statistics of atmospheric composition, dynamics, and low-level cloud properties in various chemical landscapes to investigate their mutual interactions.

This article presents an overview of the DACCIWA field campaign activities as well as some first research highlights. The rich data obtained during the campaign will be made available to the scientific community and help to advance scientific understanding, modeling, and monitoring of the atmosphere over southern West Africa.

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