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QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY, 134, 403–416, 2008.
The effect of temperature and humidity fluctuations on the liquid water path
of non-precipitating closed-cell stratocumulus clouds.
Stephan R. de Roode and Alexander Los
Abstract
The spatial variability of the liquid water path (LWP) is analyzed from a large-eddy simulation of the diurnal
cycle of stratocumulus clouds as observed during FIRE I. In stratocumulus clouds, the temperature and the total specific
humidity cannot fluctuate independently, but are tightly connected to fluctuations in the liquid water potential temperature.
If the latter are relatively small, a strong positive correlation between the temperature and the total specific humidity can
be expected. The effect of temperature fluctuations on the magnitude of liquid water fluctuations must be considered to
properly compute the LWP distribution in stratocumulus clouds.
The simulated stratocumulus cloud fields are used to compute the albedo inhomogeneity factor khi according to the
effective thickness approach. During the day, the mean LWP decreases due to short-wave radiative warming. Also, the
probability density function for the LWP becomes positively skewed due to cumuli that have their base well below the
mean stratocumulus cloud-base height. For this situation, the inhomogeneity factor khi displays a minimum value of about
0.85. For solid (unbroken) cloud with an assumed Gaussian distribution for the optical depth, we find that the minimum
inhomogeneity factor will be about 0.8. This minimum value for the inhomogeneity factor, and that from the LES results,
are larger than reported from FIRE I observations.
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