Gravity waves as a causal mechanism for transition from closed to open cellular convection in the remote South East Pacific
Abstract
The formative mechanisms of so-called Pockets of Open Cells (POCs), observed as cell-like (openly-convecting) areas embedded in remote marine stratocumulus sheets, are currently the subject of intense speculation and scientific interest. These structures can act to modulate the thermodynamic and radiative properties of large areas of the Marine Boundary Layer (MBL), as well as modifying the composition of the remote MBL through the washout of already scarce particulate matter (CCN). Moreover, the important potential climate impact of these structures, through their radiative properties, is not represented in climate or regional-scale models. The necessary conditions, or “tipping point” for the transition between the metastable closed and open cell dynamic states is also the subject of much speculation and is thought (and observed by aircraft) to be linked to the scavenging of available CCN by drizzle, with consequent feedback on the underlying convective dynamic of the cloud. This work discusses observations of satellite-retrieved cloud bulk properties during October 2008, which clearly illustrate the propagation of several gravity waves in the MBL, generated in a baroclinic disturbance at 30 degrees South, off the coast of Chile. The waves are manifest by their modulation of cloud top height by up to 500 metres peak-to-trough, with propagation perpendicular to the mean flow. Analysis of satellite imagery indicates the waves have a period of approximately one hour and a wavelength of around 55 km. Of particular importance in this study is the observed increase in cloud Liquid Water Path (LWP), which may lead to drizzle formation, in the peaks of the propagating waves, followed by the “opening up” or formation of POCs in the wake of their passing. The POCs thus formed appear stable and subsequently advect with the mean flow. We demonstrate here, with the aid of a parcel model, that simulated gravity waves are able to effectively induce drizzle through their effect on MBL and cloud dynamics, thus scavenging available CCN and initiating the transition to open cell convection. We do not suggest that gravity waves are responsible for all POCs observed in the South East Pacific (or elsewhere), but that gravity waves are one way to induce drizzle formation - the likely ubiquitous action necessary for POC formation through CCN scavenging. Furthermore, the period, wavelength and amplitude of the gravity waves are shown here to be critical to whether cloud droplets are able to be precipitated.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2009
- Bibcode:
- 2009AGUFM.A13J0419V
- Keywords:
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- 3307 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Boundary layer processes;
- 3310 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Clouds and cloud feedbacks;
- 3360 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Remote sensing;
- 3384 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Acoustic-gravity waves