Measurement report: Cloud and environmental properties associated with aggregated shallow marine cumulus and cumulus congestus

  • Ewan Crosbie
  • , Luke D. Ziemba
  • , Michael A. Shook
  • , Taylor Shingler
  • , Johnathan W. Hair
  • , Armin Sorooshian
  • , Richard A. Ferrare
  • , Brian Cairns
  • , Yonghoon Choi
  • , Joshua Digangi
  • , Glenn S. Diskin
  • , Chris Hostetler
  • , Simon Kirschler
  • , Richard H. Moore
  • , David Painemal
  • , Claire Robinson
  • , Shane T. Seaman
  • , K. Lee Thornhill
  • , Christiane Voigt
  • , Edward Winstead

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Mesoscale organization of marine convective clouds into linear or clustered states is prevalent across the tropical and subtropical oceans, and its investigation served as a guiding focus for a series of process study flights conducted as part of the Aerosol Cloud meTeorology Interactions oVer the western ATlantic Experiment (ACTIVATE) during summer 2020, 2021, and 2022. These select ACTIVATE flights involved a novel strategy for coordinating two aircraft, with respective remote sensing and in situ sampling payloads, to probe regions of organized shallow convection for several hours. The main purpose of this measurement report is to summarize the aircraft sampling approach, describe the characteristics and evolution of the cases, and provide an overview of the datasets that can serve as a starting point for more detailed modeling and analysis studies. Six flights are described, involving a total of 80 dropsonde profiles that capture the environment surrounding clustered shallow convection. The flights include detailed observations of the vertical structure of cloud systems, comprising up to 20 in situ sampling levels. Four cases involved deepening convection rooted in the marine boundary layer that developed vertically to 2-5ĝ€¯km with varying precipitation amounts, while two cases captured more complex and developed cumulus congestus systems extending above 5ĝ€¯km. In addition to the thermodynamic and dynamic characterization afforded by dropsonde and in situ measurements, the datasets include cloud and aerosol microphysics, trace gas concentrations, aerosol and droplet composition, and cloud and aerosol remote sensing from high-spectral-resolution lidar and polarimetry.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)6123-6152
Number of pages30
JournalAtmospheric Chemistry and Physics
Volume24
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - May 28 2024

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Atmospheric Science

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