Laboratory simulations show diabatic heating drives cumulus-cloud evolution and entrainment


Autoria(s): Narasimha, Roddam; Diwan, Sourabh Suhas; Duvvuri, Subrahmanyam; Sreenivas, KR; Bhat, GS
Data(s)

27/09/2011

Resumo

Clouds are the largest source of uncertainty in climate science, and remain a weak link in modeling tropical circulation. A major challenge is to establish connections between particulate microphysics and macroscale turbulent dynamics in cumulus clouds. Here we address the issue from the latter standpoint. First we show how to create bench-scale flows that reproduce a variety of cumulus-cloud forms (including two genera and three species), and track complete cloud life cycles-e.g., from a ``cauliflower'' congestus to a dissipating fractus. The flow model used is a transient plume with volumetric diabatic heating scaled dynamically to simulate latent-heat release from phase changes in clouds. Laser-based diagnostics of steady plumes reveal Riehl-Malkus type protected cores. They also show that, unlike the constancy implied by early self-similar plume models, the diabatic heating raises the Taylor entrainment coefficient just above cloud base, depressing it at higher levels. This behavior is consistent with cloud-dilution rates found in recent numerical simulations of steady deep convection, and with aircraft-based observations of homogeneous mixing in clouds. In-cloud diabatic heating thus emerges as the key driver in cloud development, and could well provide a major link between microphysics and cloud- scale dynamics.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/41409/1/Laboratory.pdf

Narasimha, Roddam and Diwan, Sourabh Suhas and Duvvuri, Subrahmanyam and Sreenivas, KR and Bhat, GS (2011) Laboratory simulations show diabatic heating drives cumulus-cloud evolution and entrainment. In: PNAS, 108 (39). pp. 16164-16169.

Publicador

National Academy of Sciences

Relação

http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1112281108

http://eprints.iisc.ernet.in/41409/

Palavras-Chave #Centre for Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences
Tipo

Journal Article

PeerReviewed