Increasing resolution and resolving convection improves the simulation
of cloud-radiative effects over the North Atlantic
Aiko Voigt
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research, Department Troposphere Research; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University, Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Institute of Meteorology and Climate Research, Department Troposphere Research; Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University
Author ProfileAbstract
Clouds interact with atmospheric radiation and substantially modify the
Earth’s energy budget. Cloud formation processes occur over a vast range
of spatial and temporal scales which make their thorough numerical
representation challenging. Therefore, the impact of parameter choices
for simulations of cloud-radiative effects is assessed in the current
study. Numerical experiments were carried out using the ICOsahedral
Nonhydrostatic (ICON) model with varying grid spacings between 2.5 and
80 km and with different subgrid-scale parameterization approaches.
Simulations have been performed over the North Atlantic with either
one-moment or two-moment microphysics and with convection being
parameterized or explicitly resolved by grid-scale dynamics. Simulated
cloud-radiative effects are compared to products derived from Meteosat
measurements. Furthermore, a sophisticated cloud classification
algorithm is applied to understand the differences and dependencies of
simulated and observed cloud-radiative effects. The cloud classification
algorithm developed for the satellite observations is also applied to
the simulation output based on synthetic infrared brightness
temperatures, a novel approach that is not impacted by changing
insolation and guarantees a consistent and fair comparison. It is found
that flux biases originate equally from clear-sky and cloudy parts of
the radiation field. Simulated cloud amounts and cloud-radiative effects
are dominated by marine, shallow clouds, and their behaviour is highly
resolution dependent. Bias compensation between shortwave and longwave
flux biases, seen in the coarser simulations, is significantly
diminished for higher resolutions. Based on the analysis results, it is
argued that cloud-microphysical and cloud-radiative properties have to
be adjusted to further improve agreement with observed cloud-radiative
effects.