This is a Preprint and has not been peer reviewed. The published version of this Preprint is available: https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-23-0203.1. This is version 4 of this Preprint.
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Abstract
Five cold-air outbreaks are investigated with aircraft offshore of continental northeast American. Flight paths aligned with the cloud-layer flow span cloud-top temperatures of -5 to -12 0C, in situ liquid water paths of up to 600 g m-2, while in situ cloud droplet number concentrations exceeding 500 cm-3 maintain effective radii below 10 micron. Ice is usually present at cloud initiation. Further downstream, ice particle number concentrations (N_i) of 0.1-2.5 L-1 indicate secondary ice production. This is enhanced near cloud top, consistent with collisional breakup of graupel and vapor-grown ice particles, and near cloud base, where ice aggregates near 0 0C. Rime-splintering is clearly evident. The highest ice water contents coincide with temperatures favoring dendritic growth. Warmer clouds and weaker surface fluxes correlate to fewer ice particles. Buoyancy fluxes reach 400-600 W m-2 near the Gulf Stream's western edge, with updrafts reaching five m s-1 supporting closely-spaced convective cells. Upper-level detrainment maintains a high overall cloud fraction despite decoupled boundary layer vertical structures. The near-surface liquid rainfall rates of three more intense cold-air outbreaks are a maximum near the Gulf Stream's eastern edge, just before the clouds transition to more open-celled structures, and correspond to higher cloud liquid water paths. The milder two cold-air outbreaks transition to lower-albedo cumulus through cloud thinning.
DOI
https://doi.org/10.31223/X50Q2D
Subjects
Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics
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Dates
Published: 2023-11-03 23:41
Last Updated: 2024-10-10 21:08
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