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Cirrus Production by Tropical Mesoscale Convective Systems

Cirrus Production by Tropical Mesoscale Convective Systems. Jasmine Cetrone and Robert Houze 8 February 2008. Are Cirrus Clouds Important?. With high clouds. Without high clouds. ?. Sherwood et al. (1994). Global Distribution of High Clouds. Majority of high clouds confined to the tropics.

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Cirrus Production by Tropical Mesoscale Convective Systems

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  1. Cirrus Production by Tropical Mesoscale Convective Systems Jasmine Cetrone and Robert Houze8 February 2008

  2. Are Cirrus Clouds Important? With high clouds Without high clouds ? Sherwood et al. (1994)

  3. Global Distribution of High Clouds • Majority of high clouds confined to the tropics JJA DJF Wylie et al. (1994)

  4. Cirrus and Precipitation • Precipitation intimately tied to cirrus ISCCP High Cloud Amounts Schumacher and Houze (2003)

  5. MCSs as Major Contributors to Upper-level Hydrometeors Houze (1982)

  6. Distribution of MCS Properties TRMM-derived summer time stratiform rain fraction TRMM TMI 85-GHz ice scattering

  7. Water Budget of a MCS SW LW LW Adapted from Houze et al. (1980)

  8. Goals • Establish climatologies of precipitation and anvil regions of MCSs over regions of the tropics • Determine relationships between the precipitation and anvil regions of MCSs • Complete the conceptual model of cloud and precipitation structure of MCSs

  9. Regions of Interest ContinentalMonsoon OceanicMonsoon Summer timeSF rain frac Maritime ContinentMonsoon Schumacher and Houze (2003)

  10. West Africa • Influenced by African Monsoon during NH summer months (continental monsoon climate) • Many squall-like MCSs • Summer 2006: AMMA project • Scanning precipitation radar • 4xdaily soundings • Vertically pointing cloud radar

  11. Maritime Continent • Influenced by Australian Monsoon during SH summer months (island monsoon climate) • Massive MCSs influenced by monsoonal flow • Long-term dataset at Darwin, Australia: • 2 scanning precipitation radars (dual-Doppler) • Vertically pointing cloud radar • 2xdaily soundings • Satellite coverage

  12. Bay of Bengal • Influenced by Asian Monsoon during NH summer months (oceanic monsoon climate) • Southward-propagating leading-convection, trailing stratiform type MCSs • May 1999: JASMINE project • Scanning precipitation radar • 3-hourly soundings • Vertically pointing cloud radar

  13. Methodology • TRMM PR and CloudSat reflectivity data from over three regions only from MCSs • 2006 Monsoon season in W Africa • 2006 Monsoon season in Bay of Bengal • 2006-2007 Monsoon season in Maritime Island • Use of hourly IR geostationary satellite data insured selection of MCS cases

  14. TRMM PR Convective CFADs W Africa Maritime Continent Bay of Bengal • Convective precip in W Africa MCSs are taller and more intense • Convective precip in Maritime and Bengal MCSs is similar, with Maritime being slightly taller

  15. TRMM PR Stratiform CFADs W Africa Maritime Continent Bay of Bengal • Stratiform precip in W Africa MCSs taller and high reflectivities at high altitudes (indicating large ice aloft, consistent with Nesbitt et al 2000.) • Stratiform precip in Maritime MCSs slightly taller and with higher reflectivities aloft than Bengal

  16. TRMM PR Convective Rain Fraction W Africa Maritime Continent Bay of Bengal • Very high convective rain fractions in W Africa MCSs, indicating stratiform regions that are smaller and/or shorter in duration • Maritime has lowest convective rain fraction, influence of monsoonal systems with large, long lasting stratiform regions • Bengal distribution indicates moderate convective rain fraction, and narrow shows that MCSs in that region are very similar to each other

  17. CloudSat Anvil CFADs W Africa Maritime Continent Bay of Bengal • W Africa anvil clouds shallower! • Maritime anvil clouds reach the highest

  18. CloudSat Thick Anvil (>6km) CFADs W Africa Maritime Continent Bay of Bengal • W Africa anvils have high frequency of high reflectivity near cloud bottom(large crystals) • Maritime and Bengal distributions similar • Evidence of aggregation below thick anvil? • High IWP for W Africa anvils compared to Bengal/Maritime anvils

  19. Conditional Instability W Africa Maritime Continent Bay of Bengal S S S S S S • W Africa has layer of strong instability from surface to ~600 hPa, leads to violent convective updrafts • Maritime has layer of instability from surface to ~600 hPa, while Bengal has more shallow layer of instability

  20. What Controls Anvil? S S S • Bengal and Maritime MCSs show many similarities in anvil, while W Africa MCSs have different anvil features • W Africa MCSs have precipitation CFADs that show deeper, more intense convection • Possibly the intensity of convection and/or fraction of convective rainfall affects the type of anvil • Much anvil comes out of stratiform precipitation regions…so smaller stratiform precipitation areas leads to less anvil S S S

  21. Convection and Anvils in MCSs S S S S S S • When deep, intense, continental convection is present, see a “settling” of the anvil • Overshooting top • Large ice falling

  22. Preliminary Conclusions • W Africa MCSs • Deep, intense convection, small stratiform area • Anvils shallower, but high IWP • Maritime MCSs • Moderate convection, large stratiform areas • Deep anvils • Bengal MCSs • Moderate convection, moderate stratiform areas • Deep anvils • Anvil height and density in MCSs influenced by convective intensity and amount • Anvil longevity possibly moderated by amount of stratiform precipitation (need case studies) S S S S S S

  23. Future Work S S S • Environmental conditions also a factor • Case studies in each region for different environmental conditions • Examine TRMM / CloudSat coincident cases for coherent view S S S

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