Simulating aerosol lifecycle impacts on the subtropical
stratocumulus-to-cumulus transition using large eddy simulations
Abstract
A Large Eddy Simulation (LES) model that simulates the aerosol
lifecycle, including aerosol sources and sinks, was used to study the
stratocumulus to cumulus transition (SCT). To initialize, force, and
evaluate the LES, we used a combination of reanalysis, satellite, and
aircraft data from the Cloud System Evolution in the Trades field
campaign in summer 2015 over the Northeast Pacific. The simulations
follow two Lagrangian trajectories from initially overcast stratocumulus
to the tropical shallow cumulus region near Hawaii. The first trajectory
is characterized by an initially clean, well-mixed stratocumulus-topped
marine boundary layer (MBL), then continuous MBL deepening and
precipitation onset followed by a clear SCT and a consistent reduction
of aerosols that ultimately leads to an ultra-clean layer in the upper
MBL. The second trajectory is characterized by an initially polluted and
decoupled MBL, weak precipitation, and a late SCT. Overall, the LES
simulates the general MBL features seen in observations. Sensitivity
studies with different aerosol initial and boundary conditions reveal
aerosol-induced changes in the transition, and albedo changes are
decomposed into the Twomey effect and adjustments of cloud liquid water
path and cloud fraction. Impacts on precipitation play a key role in the
sensitivity to aerosols: for the first case, runs with enhanced aerosols
exhibit distinct changes in microphysics and macrophysics such as
enhanced cloud droplet number concentration, reduced precipitation, and
delayed SCT. Cloud adjustments are dominant in this case. For the second
case, enhancing aerosols does not affect cloud macrophysical properties
significantly, and the Twomey effect dominates.