Abstract

Ascension Island (8° S, 14.5° W) is located at the northwestern edge of the south Atlantic stratocumulus deck, with most clouds in August characterized by surface observers as "stratocumulus and cumulus with bases at different levels", and secondarily as "cumulus of limited vertical extent" and occurring within a typically decoupled boundary layer. Field measurements have previously shown that the highest amounts of sunlight-absorbing smoke occur annually within the marine boundary layer during August. On more smoke-free days, the diurnal cycle in cloudiness includes a nighttime maximum in cloud liquid water path and rain, an afternoon cloud minimum, and a secondary late-afternoon increase in cumulus and rain. The afternoon low-cloud minimum is more pronounced on days with a smokier boundary layer. The cloud liquid water paths are also reduced throughout most of the diurnal cycle when more smoke is present, with the difference from cleaner conditions most pronounced at night. Precipitation is infrequent. An exception is the mid-morning, when the boundary layer deepens and liquid water paths increase. The data support a view that a radiatively enhanced decoupling persisting throughout the night is key to understanding the changes in the cloud diurnal cycle when the boundary layer is smokier. Under these conditions, the nighttime stratiform cloud layer does not always recouple to the sub-cloud layer, and the decoupling maintains more moisture within the sub-cloud layer. After the sun rises, enhanced shortwave absorption in a smokier boundary layer can drive a vertical ascent that momentarily couples the sub-cloud layer to the cloud layer, deepening the boundary layer and ventilating moisture throughout, a process that may also be aided by a shift to smaller droplets. After noon, shortwave absorption within smokier boundary layers again reduces the upper-level stratiform cloud and the sub-cloud relative humidity, discouraging further cumulus development and again strengthening a decoupling that lasts longer into the night. The novel diurnal mechanism provides a new challenge for cloud models to emulate. The lower free troposphere above cloud is more likely to be cooler, when boundary layer smoke is present, and lower free-tropospheric winds are stronger and more northeasterly, with both (meteorological) influences supporting further smoke entrainment into the boundary layer from above.

Highlights

  • Shortwave-absorbing aerosols above the southeast Atlantic overlay and mix in with one of the Earth’s largest stratocumulus decks from July through October

  • Orographic lifting supports the development of shallow cumulus clouds at the lifting condensation level (LCL) above the site, evident within satellite imagery under suppressed conditions and in a comparison of the vertical distribution of ceilometer-detected cloud base heights at the AMF1 site and those at the airport located 4 km away (Fig. 2)

  • Persistent southeasterly boundary layer winds encourage aerosol measurements that are representative of the sub-cloud layer above the open ocean, confirmed by comparisons to measurements from the UK CLARIFY (Cloud Aerosol Radiation Interactions and Forcing – Year 2017) aircraft campaign, based www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/14493/2019/

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Summary

Introduction

Shortwave-absorbing aerosols above the southeast Atlantic overlay and mix in with one of the Earth’s largest stratocumulus decks from July through October. Orographic lifting supports the development of shallow cumulus clouds at the lifting condensation level (LCL) above the site, evident within satellite imagery under suppressed conditions and in a comparison of the vertical distribution of ceilometer-detected cloud base heights at the AMF1 site and those at the airport located 4 km away (Fig. 2) For this reason the diurnal cycle in low-cloud properties is evaluated using geostationary satellite retrievals capable of a larger-scale overview, and the available airport measurements. Persistent southeasterly boundary layer winds (see Zuidema et al, 2015, for wind roses) encourage aerosol measurements that are representative of the sub-cloud layer above the open ocean, confirmed by comparisons to measurements from the UK CLARIFY (Cloud Aerosol Radiation Interactions and Forcing – Year 2017) aircraft campaign, based www.atmos-chem-phys.net/19/14493/2019/. On Ascension in August–September of 2017 (Jonathan Taylor, personal communication, 2019)

LASIC datasets
Satellite and surface-based cloud datasets and reanalysis
Compositing approach
Monthly-mean overview of conditions at Ascension
August time series
The low-cloud diurnal cycle as a function of the smoke loading
Explanations for the cloud diurnal cycle
On the further entrainment of free-tropospheric smoke
Findings
Discussion
Full Text
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