Abstract

AbstractHypotheses have been proposed for decades about the effect of activated cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) on delaying the warm rain process, invigorating deep convective cloud vertical development, and enhancing mixed‐phase processes. Observational support has been only qualitative with mixed results due to the lack of regional measurements of CCN concentration (NCCN), while simulations have not produced a robust consensus. Quantitative assessments of these relationships became possible with the advent of NCCN retrievals from satellites; when combined with measurements by polarimetric radar and Lightning Mapping Array (LMA), tracking convective cells observed on radar and examining precipitation properties throughout the cells' life cycle has permitted the study of the impact of NCCN on cloud and precipitation characteristics. We composited more than 2,800 well‐tracked cells in the Houston region and stratified them by NCCN, convective available potential energy (CAPE), and urban/rural locations. The results show that increased NCCN invigorates the convection until saturation near NCCN = 1,000 cm3; increasing NCCN from ~400 to an optimum of ~1,000 cm3 increases lightning activity by an order of magnitude. A further increase in CCN decreases lightning rates. Adding CAPE enhances lightning only under low NCCN (e.g., less than 500 cm3). The presence of the urban area enhances lightning for similar NCCN concentrations, although this applies mainly under low NCCN conditions. The urban heat island as manifested by cloud base height cannot explain this observation. It is suspected that the urban ultrafine aerosols contribute to the storm electrification.

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