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Chapter 5: Cloud Development and Precipitation Atmospheric Stability Determining stability Cloud development and stability Precipitation processes Precipitation types Measuring precipitation 1 Atmospheric Stability Q: Why does the air rise on some occasions and not on others? Why do the size and shape of clouds vary so much when the air does rise? A: because of different atmospheric stability conditions • Stable and unstable equilibrium stability analysis: giving initial perturbations, Stable: parcel moves back Unstable: parcel moves away from the original position 2 Determining Stability Stability analysis: assume a parcel rises following the dry or moist adiabatic process; then compare its Tp with the environmental Te (following environmental lapse rate); colder T means denser air. Stable condition: If a rising parcel’s Tp < Te, it is denser and would sink back. Unstable condition: If the rising parcel’s Tp > Te, it is less dense and will continue to rise • Stability does not control whether air will rise or sink. Rather, it controls whether rising air will continue to rise or whether sinking air will continue to sink. 3 Atmospheric Stability adiabatic process: no heat exchange of the air parcel with the environment so that rising air parcel expands and cools dry adiabatic lapse rate for parcels (10 C/km) moist adiabatic lapse rate for parcels (taken as 6 C/km) environmental lapse rate for the atmosphere (~ 6.5 C/km) Q: if a rising parcel’s T decreases at 10 C/km in an adiabatic process, does its T increases at 10 C/km as the parcel descends? a) yes, b) no Q: why is the moist lapse rate lower than dry lapse rate? a) because condensation occurs in the moist adiabatic process b) because evaporation occurs in the dry adiabatic process c) because condensation occurs in the dry adiabatic process 4 Q: why is the moist lapse rate lower over tropics (higher T) than over polar regions (lower T)? because warm saturated air contains more liquid water for condensation; because cold saturated air contains more liquid water for condensation Q: What does a radiosonde measure? dry adiabatic lapse rate; moist lapse rate; environmental lapse rate 5 Absolutely Stable Atmosphere stabilizing processes nighttime surface radiational cooling; warm air advected to cold surface; air aloft warming (e.g., subsidence inversions) • Stable air provides ideal conditions for high pollution levels. Q: For a rising surface dry parcel with dew point T of 20C, its temperature at 2000 m height is: a) 10C, b) 14C, c) 18 C, d) 20C 6 Absolutely Unstable Atmosphere destabilizing processes daytime solar heating of surface air; cold air advected to warm surface superadiabatic lapse rates (> 10 C/km) • Unstable air tends to be well-mixed. Q: For a descending saturated parcel at 1000 m height (with T = 24C), its T at surface is: a) 28C, b) 30C, c) 32C, d) 34C 7 Conditionally Unstable Air Conditional instability: environmental lapse rate between dry and moist lapse rates Lifting condensation level is the cloud base Level of free convection Q: Between what heights in the figure would Tp = Te? a) 0-1 km, b) 1-2 km, c) 2-3 km 8 Q: If environmental lapse is greater than dry lapse rate, the atmosphere is a) stable, b) unstable, c) conditionally unstable Q: If environmental lapse is less than moist lapse rate, the atmosphere is a) stable, b) unstable, c) conditionally unstable Q: The earth’s atmosphere is ordinarily a) stable, b) unstable, c) conditionally unstable Q: The air T in an unsaturated parcel follows the a) dry lapse rate, b) moist lapse rate, c) environmental lapse rate Q: If air T increases with height, the air is surely stable. If it decreases with height, the air is: a) stable, b), unstable, c) conditionally unstable, d) undecided9 Q: For stable condition, if clouds exist, they are usually a)cumuliform clouds, b) stratiform clouds Q: For conditionally unstable conditions, if clouds exist, they are usually a)cumuliform clouds, b)stratiform clouds Q: Do you usually expect to see layered clouds in Tucson during the day in summer? a) yes, b) no 10 Four Ways for Cumulus Development surface heating and free convection uplift along topography convergence of air lifting along weather fronts 11 Convection and Clouds thermals fair weather cumulus • Fair weather cumulus provide a visual marker of thermals. • Bases of fair-weather cumulus clouds marks the lifting condensation level, the level at which rising air first becomes saturated. Q: why are there large clear areas between cumulus clouds? 12 Topography and Clouds rain shadow: Due to frequent westerly winds, the western slope of the Rocky Mountains receives much more precipitation than the eastern slope. 13 Precipitation Processes The diameter increases by 2 orders of magnitude from condensation nucleus to cloud droplet, and from cloud droplet to raindrop Growth of cloud droplets by condensation is too slow (a few days), but rain drops can develop in < 1 hr in nature Q: 0.0002 mm is: a) 20 μm, b) 2 μm, c) 0.2 μm, d) 0.02 μm 14 Collision and Coalescence Process Warm clouds (with T above freezing) terminal velocity large drops fall faster than small drops coalescence: the merging of a large cloud droplet with small droplets by collision Q: Do larger drops fall faster in a vacuum? a) yes, b) no Q: Does coalescence exist for uniform droplets? a) yes, b) no 15 Ice Crystal Process cold clouds (ice crystals and liquid droplets coexist) supercooled water droplets due to lack of ice nuclei Q: what are the two reasons for the existence of the anvil? 16 Saturation vapor pressures over liquid water is higher than over ice This causes water vapor molecules to diffuse from water droplet towards the ice crystals Ice crystals grow at the expense of water droplets. It is called ice-crystal (or Bergeron) process. 17 Snow pellets and snowflakes Accretion: ice crystals grow by colliding with supercooled water droplets to form snow pellets 18 Cloud Seeding and Precipitation cloud seeding: inject (or seed) a cloud with small particles that will act as nuclei so that the cloud particles will grow large enough to fall to the surface as precipitation silver iodide (AgI): as cloud-seeding agent because it has a crystalline structure similar to an ice crystal; it acts as an effective ice nucleus at T = -4˚C and lower. Very popular in some countries • It is very difficult to determine whether a cloud seeding attempt is successful. How would you know whether the cloud would have resulted in precipitation if it hadn’t been seeded? Q: What are the preferable clouds for seeding? A: existence of supercooled liquid droplets; low ratio of ice crystals to droplets. 19 Q: In warm clouds (with T above freezing), cloud droplets grow to rain droplets primarily through a) collision/coalescence process b) ice crystal process, c) accretion Q: Cloud liquid droplet collision is called a) coalescence, b) accretion Q: What is the purpose of using silver iodide for the seeding of supercooled clouds? a) Increase the number of ice nuclei b) Increase the number of cloud nuclai Q: Cloud (liquid) droplet does not exist for temperature: a) warmer than 0˚C, b) warmer than −20˚C, c) warmer than −40˚C, d) colder than −40˚C 20 Precipitation Types Rain Snow Sleet and freezing rain Hail 21 Rain Rain: drop diameter of 0.5 ~ 6mm Drizzle: drop diameter < 0.5mm Virga: rainfall not reaching surface Rain drop shape #1: tear-shaped #2: spherical shape for small raindrops with diameter <2 mm #3: For large raindrops with diameter > 2 mm 21 Snow Fallstreaks: ice crystals and snowflakes from high cirrus clouds that usually do not reach surface Flurries: light snow falling from cumulus clouds snow storm: heavy snowfall Blizzard: low T and strong wind bearing large amounts of snow, reducing visibility to a few meters 23 Snow Dendrite: Snowflake shape depends on both temperature and relative humidity Annual snowfall in U.S. and Canada Mt. Rainier in Washington receives an annual average snowfall of 17 m! 24 Sleet and Freezing Rain Sleet: frozen raindrop (called ice pellet); makes a tapping sound when falling on glass; bounce when striking the ground Freezing rain: supercooled liquid drops spread out and freeze on cold surface Q: what is the necessary vertical temperature profile for sleet? A: a below-cloud (above freezing) layer to melt snowflake; deep freezing layer to freeze the raindrop Q: what is the necessary vertical temperature profile for sleet? A: shallow below-cloud layer (so that supercooled raindrop can not be frozen) 25 Sleet and Freezing Rain Ice storm: substantial accumulation of freezing rain Rime: white granular ice, formed by freezing small, supercooled cloud or fog droplets 26 Snow Grains and Snow Pellets snow grains: snow equivalent of drizzle snow pellets: larger than snow grains and bounce on surface; formed as ice crystals collide with supercooled water droplets; usually from cumulus congestus clouds Graupel: when snow pellets accumulate a heavy coating of rime, they are called graupel 27 Hail • hail is produced when graupel grows by accumulating supercooled liquid droplets, a process called accretion. Strong updrafts are needed. • A hailstone can be sliced open to reveal accretion rings, one for each updraft cycle. 18.75 inch in diameter 28 Q: what is the shape of a small rain droplet? a) tear-shaped, b) spherical, c) mushroom Q: What is the difference between sleet and freezing rain? A: sleet refers to raindrops freezing through a deep cold layer below cloud and could bounce on the ground, while freezing rain refers to supercooled liquid drops spreading out and freezing on cold surface (ground, trees, …) and substantially affect driving conditions (both on the road and on the wind shield) Q: When ice crystals collide with supercooled water droplets, what would be formed? a) snow pellets, b) graupel, c) hail 29 Precipitation Measurement Instruments standard rain gauge: 0.01 inch interval ; trace tipping bucket rain gauge: used in ASOS • difficult to capture rain in a bucket when wind blows strongly. • Tipping bucket underestimates rainfall for heavy events 30 Doppler Radar and Precipitation Radar: radio detection and ranging Doppler radar: use Doppler shift (e.g., a higher-pitched whistle as a train approaches you); Provide precipitation area and intensity; Provide horizontal speed of falling rain Polarimetric radar: identify rain from snow (by using horizontal and vertical pulses) 31 Measuring precipitation from space. 32 Q: Can you claim from your rain gauge that precipitation rate is 0.001 in/hour? a) yes, b) no Q: Surface temperature is above 0C for a)sleet, b) frozen rain, c) hail Q: how to transform a stable atmosphere near surface to an unstable atmosphere? Q: for a thick nimbostratus cloud with ice crystals and supercooled cloud droplets of about the same size, which precipitation process would be most important in producing rain from the cloud? Why? 33