Literature DB >> 32981971

The Weather Research and Forecasting Model with Aerosol-Cloud Interactions (WRF-ACI): Development, Evaluation, and Initial Application.

Timothy Glotfelty1, Kiran Alapaty1, Jian He1, Patrick Hawbecker2, Xiaoliang Song3, Guang Zhang3.   

Abstract

The Weather Research and Forecasting Model with Aerosol-Cloud Interactions (WRF-ACI) is developed for studying aerosol effects on gridscale and subgrid-scale clouds using common aerosol activation and ice nucleation formulations and double-moment cloud microphysics in a scale-aware subgrid-scale parameterization scheme. Comparisons of both the standard WRF and WRF-ACI models' results for a summer season against satellite and reanalysis estimates show that the WRF-ACI system improves the simulation of cloud liquid and ice water paths. Correlation coefficients for nearly all evaluated parameters are improved, while other variables show slight degradation. Results indicate a strong cloud lifetime effect from current climatological aerosols increasing domain average cloud liquid water path and reducing domain average precipitation as compared to a simulation with aerosols reduced by 90%. Increased cloud-top heights indicate a thermodynamic invigoration effect, but the impact of thermodynamic invigoration on precipitation is overwhelmed by the cloud lifetime effect. A combination of cloud lifetime and cloud albedo effects increases domain average shortwave cloud forcing by ~3.0 W m-2. Subgrid-scale clouds experience a stronger response to aerosol levels, while gridscale clouds are subject to thermodynamic feedbacks because of the design of the WRF modeling framework. The magnitude of aerosol indirect effects is shown to be sensitive to the choice of autoconversion parameterization used in both the gridscale and subgrid-scale cloud microphysics, but spatial patterns remain qualitatively similar. These results indicate that the WRF-ACI model provides the community with a computationally efficient tool for exploring aerosol-cloud interactions.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 32981971      PMCID: PMC7513884          DOI: 10.1175/MWR-D-18-0267.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mon Weather Rev        ISSN: 0027-0644            Impact factor:   3.735


  4 in total

1.  Aerosols, cloud microphysics, and fractional cloudiness.

Authors:  B A Albrecht
Journal:  Science       Date:  1989-09-15       Impact factor: 47.728

2.  Flood or drought: how do aerosols affect precipitation?

Authors:  Daniel Rosenfeld; Ulrike Lohmann; Graciela B Raga; Colin D O'Dowd; Markku Kulmala; Sandro Fuzzi; Anni Reissell; Meinrat O Andreae
Journal:  Science       Date:  2008-09-05       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Does temperature nudging overwhelm aerosol radiative effects in regional integrated climate models?

Authors:  Jian He; Timothy Glotfelty; Khairunnisa Yahya; Kiran Alapaty; Shaocai Yu
Journal:  Atmos Environ (1994)       Date:  2017       Impact factor: 4.798

4.  Improving organic aerosol treatments in CESM/CAM5: Development, application, and evaluation.

Authors:  Timothy Glotfelty; Jian He; Yang Zhang
Journal:  J Adv Model Earth Syst       Date:  2017-06-21       Impact factor: 6.660

  4 in total
  2 in total

1.  Studying Scale Dependency of Aerosol Cloud Interactions using Multi-Scale Cloud Formulations.

Authors:  Timothy Glotfelty; Kiran Alapaty; Jian He; Patrick Hawbecker; Xiaoliang Song; Guang Zhang
Journal:  Mon Weather Rev       Date:  2020-11-01       Impact factor: 3.735

2.  Impact of scale-aware deep convection on the cloud liquid and ice water paths and precipitation using the Model for Prediction Across Scales (MPAS-v5.2).

Authors:  Laura D Fowler; Mary C Barth; Kiran Alapaty
Journal:  Geosci Model Dev       Date:  2020-06-29       Impact factor: 6.135

  2 in total

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