The common occurrence of highly supercooled drizzle and rain near the coastal regions of the western United States

Daniel Rosenfeld*, Rei Chemke, Paul Demott, Ryan C. Sullivan, Roy Rasmussen, Frank McDonough, Jennifer Comstock, Beat Schmid, Jason Tomlinson, Haflidi Jonsson, Kaitlyn Suski, Alberto Cazorla, Kimberly Prather

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

Highly supercooled rain and drizzle from cloud tops at -12 to -21°C down to the 0° isotherm was documented by aircraft observations in clouds over a wide range of meteorological situations under relatively pristine marine aerosol conditions. The Gulfstream-1 aircraft during the CalWater campaign in February and early March 2011 measured clouds over the coastal waters of northern California, orographically triggered convective clouds over the foothills of the Sierra Nevada, and orographic layer clouds over Yosemite National Park. Supercooled drizzle in layer clouds near Juneau, Alaska, was measured by the Wyoming King Air as part of a FAA project to study aircraft icing in this region. Low concentrations of cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) were commonly observed in all of these clouds, allowing for the formation of clouds with small concentrations of mostly large drops that coalesced into supercooled drizzle and raindrops. Another common observation was the absence of ice nuclei (IN) and/or ice crystals in measurable concentrations, associated with persistent supercooled drizzle and rain. Average ice crystal concentrations were 0.007 l-1 at the top of convective clouds at -12°C and 0.03 l-1 in the case of layer clouds at -21°C. In combination, these two conditions of low concentrations of CCN and very few IN provide ideal conditions for the formation of highly supercooled drizzle and rain. These results help explain the anomalously high incidences of aircraft icing at cold temperatures in U.S. west coast clouds and highlight the need to include aerosol effects when simulating aircraft icing with cloud models. Key Points Persistent highly supercooled rain was observed in clouds down to -21ËšCIt occurred in a wide range of convective, orographic and layer arctic cloudsThe likely cause was dearth of CCN and IN aerosols in pristine marine air masses

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)9819-9833
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research D: Atmospheres
Volume118
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - 16 Sep 2013

Keywords

  • Cloud aerosol interactions
  • Supercooled drizzle
  • Supercooled rain

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