Abstract

AbstractMicrophysics parameterizations in large-scale models often account for subgrid variability in the calculation of process rates by integrating over assumed subgrid distributions of the input variables. The variances and covariances that define distribution width may be specified or diagnosed. The correlation ρ of cloud and rain mass mixing ratio/liquid water content (LWC) is a key input for accurate prediction of the accretion rate and a constant value is typically assumed. In this study, high-frequency aircraft measurements with a spatial resolution of ≈22 cm are used to evaluate the scaling behavior of cloud and rain LWC (qc and qr, respectively) and to demonstrate how and why covariability varies with length scale ℓ. It is shown that power spectral densities of both qc and qr exhibit scale invariance across a wide range of scales (2.04–142 m for qc; 33–1.45 × 104 m for qr). Because the cloud–rain cospectrum is also scale invariant, ρ is therefore expected to vary with ℓ. Direct calculation of ρ shows that it generally increases with ℓ, but there is significant variability in the ρ–ℓ relationship that primarily depends on cloud drop number concentration N and cloud cellular organization, suggesting that ρ may also vary with cloud regime. A parameterization of ρ as a function of ℓ and N is developed from aircraft observations and implications for diagnosis of ρ from limited-area model output are also discussed.

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