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Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud...

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Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5
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Page 1: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

CloudsATS351

Lecture 5

Page 2: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Outline

• Review CCN• Fog• Clouds Types• Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification

Page 3: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cloud Condensation Nuclei• Aerosols may become CN; and CN may become CCN

– But not all CN are CCN– Larger concentrations over land

• Cloud droplets can form on both insoluble and soluble particles

• A particle that will serve as CCN is called hygroscopic or hydrophilic – condensation may occur at RH <100%

• A particle that will not serve as a CCN is called hydrophobic.– condensation may occur at RH >100%

• CCN Sources may include:– dust, volcanoes, factory smoke, forest fires, sea salt

Page 4: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cloud Condensation Nuclei

• Described by the size of the particle

Page 5: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Haze

• Dry haze– Just the small particles

themselves, maybe a little bit of condensation

• Wet haze– Begins at RH ~ 75%– Much more light

scattering than dry (3x)

Page 6: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Fog• Going above 70% RH to 100%• Condensation on less active nuclei• Essentially, a thick wet haze on the ground or a

low cloud• Called fog when visibility is less than 1 km• 4 Main Types

– Radiation– Advection– Upslope– Evaporation/Mixing

Page 7: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Fog• Type of CN affects fog• Over the ocean

– Fewer, larger drops

• Over urban areas– More, smaller drops– Lower visibility– London Fog

• Chemical reactions can cause fog to become acidic

• If temperatures drop belowfreezing, freezing fogmay result

Page 8: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Radiation/Ground Fog• Surface radiatively cools• Light breeze helps more air contact cold surface• Common in the fall and winter (associated with

ridges)• Common in low-lying areas

– River valleys

• Form upward from the ground– Deepest around sunrise– May intensify after sunrise (dew evaporation)

• “Burns Off” with more insolation– Dissipates from bottom up– Dissipates easily around edges (thin, mixing)

Page 9: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Advection Fog

• Warm air moves over a cold surface.

• Breeze required• Pacific Coast Cold Current• Gulf Stream and British Isles• May combine with radiation

fog

Page 10: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Upslope Fog

• Moist air rises up the side of a mountain

• Just like a cloud forming, but touching the surface

• Would be seen on western slopes (not around Fort Collins as much except in the case of easterly winds and associated upslope)

• Can last for days under the right conditions

Page 11: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Evaporation (Mixing) Fog

• Just like breathing out when it’s cold

• Cold air over warm water (steam fog)– Seen over a pool or spa

• Increased moisture raises the dew point– Maintained through vapor

pressure difference and mixing

• Steam devils on a lake• Precipitation Fog

Page 12: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Foggy Weather

Annual number of days with fog in the US

Page 13: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Clouds

• Clouds result when saturation occurs• Properties:

– Variety of sizes– Contain water drops and/or ice crystals– Various heights– Stratospheric clouds rare, but important for

creation of the ozone hole

Page 14: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cloud Classification

Page 15: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.
Page 16: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cirriform Clouds• Usually exist above 16,000 feet• Generally thin, sometimes partially translucent• Comprised of ice crystals• Absorb longwave radiation, but highly reflective

of visible radiation (high albedo)• Rarely precipitate

– Virga• Examples:

Page 17: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cirrus (Ci): Called “mares tails”

Wispy

Page 18: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cirrostratus (Cs): Usually present when halos around the sun are observed

Halo

Page 19: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cirrocumulus (Cc): Called “fish scales” or “mackerel sky”

Page 20: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Stratiform clouds

• Characterized by a horizontally uniform base (Layered)

• May or may not precipitate• May exist at any level

Page 21: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Stratus (St): Uniform and gray, maybe lifted fog

Page 22: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Stratocumulus (Sc): Small “empty” spaces, large coverage

Page 23: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Nimbostratus (Ns): Patchier and rainier than regular stratus

Page 24: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Marine stratus

Page 25: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cumuloform clouds

• Large vertical extent• May or may not precipitate• Result from vertical motion• Cumulus (Cu) Examples:

Page 26: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cumulus Humilis: “Fair weather”

Page 27: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cumulus Congestus: Towering Cumulus

Page 28: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cumulus Congestus

Page 29: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cumulonimbus: Anvil Cloud

Page 30: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.
Page 31: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Other cloud types

Page 32: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Mammatus clouds

• Precipitation evaporates out of anvil

• Evaporation cools the air and it sinks

• If drops are large, mammatus will be long lived

Page 33: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Fractus Clouds

• Also known as scud clouds

• Low, detached clouds caught in the outflow of a thunderstorm

• Can also be seen below stratus clouds.

Page 34: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Pyrocumulus

• Caused by fire, volcano or industry

• Caused by intense heating of moist air

• Only forms in Calm wind situations

Page 35: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

• Condensed exhaust from jet aircraft

• Important when considering climate effects of clouds

Contrails

Page 36: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cloud Formations

• Lenticular• Kelvin-Helmholtz waves• Cloud streets• Wall Clouds• Shelf Clouds

Page 37: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Lenticular Clouds

• Stationary, lens-shaped clouds over mountains at high altitude

• Stable, moist air flows over mountain, creating a large scale standing wave

• Indicates region of turbulence

Page 38: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Kelvin-Helmholtz Waves

• Form when two parallel layers of air are moving at different speeds and in different directions

• Upper layer is usually faster• Very short lived

Page 39: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cloud Streets

• Form due to horizontal rolls in the atmosphere

• Also due to uneven surface heating• Clouds form over updrafts in rolls• Occurs more frequently over the

ocean

Page 40: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Shelf and Roll Clouds

• Low, horizontal, wedge-like cloud• Shelf: Attached to Parent Storm• Roll: Removed from Parent Storm• Formation is due to gust front from

thunderstorms

Page 41: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Wall Cloud

• Associated with severe thunderstorms

• Indicates area of strongest updraft• The strongest tornados form here

Page 42: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Really High Clouds

• Nacreous Clouds (mother of pearl)– Form in stratosphere– Seen best at polar latitudes in winter– Composition not well known

• Noctilucent Clouds– Sometimes seen in the mesosphere– Stars shine through them– Made of tiny ice crystals

Page 43: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Nacreous Clouds

Page 44: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Nacreous Clouds

Page 45: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Noctilucent Clouds

From Space

From Surface

Page 46: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Satellite Imagery

• Visible imagery: essentially a black and white camera on a satellite. Measures brightness in the visible spectrum.

• Infrared imagery: measures infrared radiance from the surface it is pointed at. From blackbody theory, the temperature of the surface can be found; since temperature changes with height, the cloud-top height can then be estimated.

Page 47: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Visible Satellite• Pros

- good at showing low clouds and fog- available in high spatial resolution

• Cons- only works in daylight- clouds can be confused with reflective features like snow- optically thin clouds like cirrus don’t show as well

Page 48: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

IR Satellite• Pros

- available at all hours- provides an estimate of cloud-top height

• Cons- lower spatial resolution- low clouds don’t show because their temperatures are close to the surface temperature

• Color enhancement table often applied to bring out important temperatures

Raw Enhanced

Page 49: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Clouds and Satellite Imagery

• The bright, puffy areas in the visible image on the right are cumulus and cumulonimbus clouds (the cumulonimbus are fuzzier around the edges). Notice how the cloud tops over the Front Range are cold in the IR imagery

Page 50: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Cirrus in visible vs. IR

• Because cirrus are cold and optically thin (meaning the sun can be seen through the cloud), they are more easily seen in the IR than the visible

Page 51: Clouds ATS351 Lecture 5. Outline Review CCN Fog Clouds Types Use of Satellite in Cloud Identification.

Low clouds/fog in visible vs. IR

• Because low clouds are bright and warm, they are easily seen in the visible, but not the IR


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