Aircraft-Induced Hole Punch and Canal Clouds

Inadvertent Cloud Seeding

Andrew J. Heymsfield
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Patrick C. Kennedy
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Steve Massie
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Carl Schmitt
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Zhien Wang
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Samuel Haimov
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Art Rangno
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The production of holes and channels in altocumulus clouds by two commercial turboprop aircraft is documented for the first time. An unprecedented dataset combining in situ measurements from microphysical probes with remote sensing measurements from cloud radar and lidar operating from the National Science Foundation (NSF)/NCAR C-130 aircraft, as well as ground-based NOAA and Colorado State University (CSU) radars, is used to describe the radar/lidar properties of a hole punch cloud and channel and the ensuing ice microphysical properties and structure of the ice column that subsequently developed. Ice particle production by commercial turboprop aircraft climbing through clouds much warmer than the regions where contrails are produced has the potential to significantly modify the cloud microphysical properties and effectively seed them under some conditions. Jet aircraft may also be producing hole punch clouds when flying through altocumulus with supercooled droplets at heights lower than their normal cruise altitudes, where contrails can form. Commercial aircraft can therefore generate ice and affect the clouds at temperatures as much as 30°C warmer than the −40°C contrail formation threshold temperature.

National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming

Catalina, Arizona

*Retired

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Andrew Heymsfield, National Center for Atmospheric Research, P.O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307, E-mail: heyms1@ucar.edu

The production of holes and channels in altocumulus clouds by two commercial turboprop aircraft is documented for the first time. An unprecedented dataset combining in situ measurements from microphysical probes with remote sensing measurements from cloud radar and lidar operating from the National Science Foundation (NSF)/NCAR C-130 aircraft, as well as ground-based NOAA and Colorado State University (CSU) radars, is used to describe the radar/lidar properties of a hole punch cloud and channel and the ensuing ice microphysical properties and structure of the ice column that subsequently developed. Ice particle production by commercial turboprop aircraft climbing through clouds much warmer than the regions where contrails are produced has the potential to significantly modify the cloud microphysical properties and effectively seed them under some conditions. Jet aircraft may also be producing hole punch clouds when flying through altocumulus with supercooled droplets at heights lower than their normal cruise altitudes, where contrails can form. Commercial aircraft can therefore generate ice and affect the clouds at temperatures as much as 30°C warmer than the −40°C contrail formation threshold temperature.

National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado

Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming

Catalina, Arizona

*Retired

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Andrew Heymsfield, National Center for Atmospheric Research, P.O. Box 3000, Boulder, CO 80307, E-mail: heyms1@ucar.edu
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