Abstract

Abstract. The distribution of ice layers in the polar summer mesosphere (called polar mesospheric clouds or PMCs) is sensitive to background atmospheric conditions and therefore affected by global-scale dynamics. To investigate this coupling it is necessary to simulate the global distribution of PMCs within a 3-dimensional (3-D) model that couples large-scale dynamics with cloud microphysics. However, modeling PMC microphysics within 3-D global chemistry climate models (GCCM) is a challenge due to the high computational cost associated with particle following (Lagrangian) or sectional microphysical calculations. By characterizing the relationship between the PMC effective radius, ice water content (iwc), and local temperature (T) from an ensemble of simulations from the sectional microphysical model, the Community Aerosol and Radiation Model for Atmospheres (CARMA), we determined that these variables can be described by a robust empirical formula. The characterized relationship allows an estimate of an altitude distribution of PMC effective radius in terms of local temperature and iwc. For our purposes we use this formula to predict an effective radius as part of a bulk parameterization of PMC microphysics in a 3-D GCCM to simulate growth, sublimation and sedimentation of ice particles without keeping track of the time history of each ice particle size or particle size bin. This allows cost effective decadal scale PMC simulations in a 3-D GCCM to be performed. This approach produces realistic PMC simulations including estimates of the optical properties of PMCs. We validate the relationship with PMC data from the Solar Occultation for Ice Experiment (SOFIE).

Highlights

  • The Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) satellite was launched in April 2007 with its primary focus to study the formation of Polar Mesospheric Clouds (PMC) (Russell et al, 2009)

  • While the empirical formula that characterizes the relationship between iwc, T and reff can be used for a number of possible applications, our purpose is to use it to incorporate a bulk PMC parameterization into Whole-Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM) to run decadal scale PMC simulations

  • The means of including a representation of PMC microphysics in a multidimensional global climate model without using a Lagrangian or sectional microphysics code framework has been developed. This bulk PMC parameterization allows for theoretical ice cloud microphysics to be applied to ice particles to simulate growth, sublimation and sedimentation

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Summary

Introduction

The Aeronomy of Ice in the Mesosphere (AIM) satellite was launched in April 2007 with its primary focus to study the formation of Polar Mesospheric Clouds (PMC) (Russell et al, 2009). Boudala et al developed an empirical formula using in-situ cloud data to predict effective radius of tropospheric ice particles using local T and iwc in a global model We adopted this empirical formula to characterize the relationship between these variables for PMCs, using an ensemble of simulations from the one-dimensional version of the Community Aerosol and Radiation Model for Atmospheres (CARMA) microphysical model (Rapp and Thomas, 2006). The ice grows, sublimates and reappears as the temperature varies This is a more realistic representation of the ice water distribution over altitude and time than the reference CARMA simulation presented in Rapp and Thomas (2006) where the model was initialized with supersaturated conditions and let to run for 48 h without changing the temperature profile. The empirical formula reproduces the overall distribution of effective radii, which peaks near 20 nm

CARMA comparisons
Implementation in the WACCM Model
Findings
Summary and conclusions
Full Text
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