Veranstaltungskalender

 
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30.Sep
11:00
KIT Campus Nord, IMK-AAF
Gebäude 326, Raum 150 …
Dominik Spannagel, KIT, IMK-AAF
 
 
29.Okt
15:15
CN, Geb. 435, Raum 2.05
Prof. Dr. Anja Schmidt, DLR
tbd
19.Nov
15:45
Kolloquium
tbd
CS, Geb. 30.23, 13. OG, Raum 13-02
Prof. Dr. Yapin Shao, Universität zu Köln
03.Dez
15:45
CS, Geb. 30.23, 13. OG, Raum 13-02
Dr. Quentin Coopman, Université de Lille
At temperatures between -40°C and 0°C, clouds can be mixed phase, so called because they consist of a mixture of both liquid cloud droplets and ice crystals. This type of cloud is especially poorly represented in climate models. One of the reasons is that both hydrometeors are assumed to be homogeneously mixed in global models, but observations show that ice and liquid are heterogeneously mixed and exist in separate "pockets". This difference in the 3-dimensional spatial distribution of ice and liquid is important to assess and quantify precipitation, cloud processes, radiative properties, and consequently their impact on climate change. The present study aims to better characterize mixed phase clouds and especially the spatial distribution of the thermodynamic phase and understand how meteorology, air parcel transport and aerosols impact it.
 
We defined a parameter to describe the spatial distribution of liquid and ice phases within mixed-phase clouds from observations from the space-based lidar CALIOP (Cloud-Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarisation). We spatially and temporally collocated the satellite measurements with reanalysis retrievals of aerosol concentration and meteorological parameters from ERA5 (European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts Reanalysis v5) and MERRA-2 (Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications, version 2) and then applied a multi-linear linear regression fit to quantify the influence of the external parameters on the spatial distribution of the cloud phase up to first order. A second part of the study focuses on ground-based measurements from the North Slope Alaska Station (NSA), where the transport of air parcels is analysed according to cloud type.
 
Focusing on the Arctic region, the results show that temperature is the most important parameter influencing the liquid-ice interface: for example, clouds with a temperature above 265 K have seven times more liquid-ice interfaces and are more homogeneously mixed than clouds with a temperature below 253 K. Black carbon concentration are also important parameters to describe the phase distribution. At NSA, clouds associated with higher transport may be more heterogeneously mixed. The results could be used to refine the parameterisation of clouds in models and their impact on climate change. 
14.Jan
15:15
CS, Geb. 30.23, 13. OG, Raum 13-02
Dr. Joachim Fallmannn, Stadt Heidelberg
21.Jan
15:15
CN, Geb. 435, Raum 2.05
Jun.-Prof. Dr. Katharina Schröer, Universität Freiburg
tbd
28.Jan
15:45
Kolloquium
tbd
CS, Geb. 30.23, 13.OG, Zimmer 13-02
Prof. Dr. Jan Härter, Universität Potsdam
tbd
04.Feb
15:45
CS, Geb. 30.23, 13. OG, Raum 13-02
Prof. Dr. Martin Weissmann, Universität Wien
tbd