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Dilution of boundary layer cloud condensation nucleus concentrations by free tropospheric entrainment during marine cold air outbreaks
  • +12
  • Florian Tornow,
  • Andrew S. Ackerman,
  • Ann Fridlind,
  • Brian Cairns,
  • Ewan Crosbie,
  • Simon Kirschler,
  • Richard H Moore,
  • Claire E Robinson,
  • Michael Shook,
  • Chellappan Seethala,
  • Christiane Voigt,
  • Edward L Winstead,
  • Luke D. Ziemba,
  • Paquita Zuidema,
  • Armin Sorooshian
Florian Tornow
Columbia University and NASA GISS

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Andrew S. Ackerman
NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies
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Ann Fridlind
NASA-GISS
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Brian Cairns
NASA GISS
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Ewan Crosbie
Universities Space Research Association
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Simon Kirschler
Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR)
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Richard H Moore
NASA Langley Research Center
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Claire E Robinson
Science Systems and Applications
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Michael Shook
Langley Research Center
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Chellappan Seethala
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science
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Christiane Voigt
Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR)
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Edward L Winstead
NASA Langley Research Center
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Luke D. Ziemba
NASA Langley Research Center
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Paquita Zuidema
University of Miami/RSMAS
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Armin Sorooshian
University of Arizona
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Abstract

Recent aircraft measurements over the northwest Atlantic enable an investigation of how entrainment from the free troposphere (FT) impacts cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) in the marine boundary layer (MBL) during cold-air outbreaks (CAOs), motivated by the role of CCN in mediating transitions from closed to open-cell regimes. Observations compiled over eight flights indicate predominantly far lesser CCN concentrations in the FT than in the MBL. For one flight, a fetch-dependent MBL-mean CCN budget is compiled from estimates of sea-surface fluxes, entrainment of FT air, and hydrometeor collision-coalescence, based on in-situ and remote-sensing measurements. Results indicate a dominant role of FT entrainment in reducing MBL CCN concentrations, consistent with satellite-observed trends in droplet number concentration upwind of CAO cloud-regime transitions over the northwest Atlantic. Relatively scant CCN may widely be associated with FT dry intrusions, and should accelerate cloud regime transitions where underlying MBL air is CCN-rich, thereby reducing regional albedo.