Abstract
In general circulation models, clouds are parameterized and radiative transfer calculations are performed using the plane-parallel approximation over the cloudy fraction of each model grid. The albedo bias resulting from the plane-parallel representation of spatially heterogeneous clouds has been extensively studied, but the impact of entrainment-mixing processes on cloud microphysics has been neglected up to now. In this paper, this issue is examined by using large-eddy simulations of stratocumulus clouds and tridimensional calculations of radiative transfer in the visible and near-infrared ranges. Two extreme scenarios of mixing are tested: the homogeneous mixing scheme with constant concentration and reduced droplet sizes, against the inhomogeneous mixing scheme, with reduced concentration and constant droplet sizes. The tests reveal that entrainment-mixing effects at cloud top may substantially bias the simulated albedo. In the worse case, which corresponds to a fragmented and thin stratocumulus cloud, the albedo bias changes from -3% to -31% when using both mixing schemes alternatively. © 2007 American Meteorological Society.
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CITATION STYLE
Chosson, F., Brenguier, J. L., & Schüller, L. (2007). Entrainment-mixing and radiative transfer simulation in boundary layer clouds. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 64(7), 2670–2682. https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS3975.1
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