External Drivers and Mesoscale Self-Organization of Shallow Cold Pools
in the Trade-Wind Regime
Abstract
Recent observations of the trade-wind regions highlight the
covariability between cold-pool properties and mesoscale cloud
organization. Given the covariability of organization with cloud cover
and albedo, this suggests a potential impact of cold pools on the cloud
radiative effect (CRE). To explore this, we use an ensemble of 103
large-domain, high-resolution, large-eddy simulations and investigate
how the variability in cold pools is determined by large-scale external
cloud-controlling factors (CCFs) and shaped by processes within the
mesoscale. It is demonstrated that the size and frequency of occurrence
of cold pools are strongly influenced by the near-surface horizontal
wind speed and large-scale subsidence. The temporal evolution of cold
pools is strongly correlated with the diurnality in radiation. Even
without external variability, we find a strong intermittent behaviour in
the evolution of cold pools, governed by a complex interplay between
cold pools and clouds which expresses itself in the form of shallow
squall lines. These squall lines result from precipitating downdrafts,
cold pool outflows and the resulting gust fronts, reinforcing parent
clouds. Cold pools influence the CRE of trade cumuli, but only when they
exist during the day. This emphasizes the importance of the
synchronization between cold-pool events and the diurnal cycle of insolation for the dependence of the CRE on cold pools.