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Midlatitude Cirrus Clouds Derived from Hurricane Nora: A Case Study with Implications for Ice Crystal Nucleation and ShapeHurricane Nora traveled up the Bala Peninsula coast in the unusually warm El Nino waters of September 1997, until rapidly decaying as it approached Southern California on 24 September. The anvil cirrus blowoff from the final surge of tropical convection became embedded in subtropical flow that advected the cirrus across the western US, where it was studied from the Facility for Atmospheric Remote Sensing (FARS) in Salt Lake City, Utah. A day later, the cirrus shield remnants were redirected southward by midlatitude circulations into the Southern Great Plains, providing a case study opportunity for the research aircraft and ground-based remote sensors assembled at the Clouds and Radiation Testbed (CART) site in northern Oklahoma. Using these comprehensive resources and new remote sensing cloud retrieval algorithms, the microphysical and radiative cloud properties of this unusual cirrus event are uniquely characterized. Importantly, at both the FARS and CART sites the cirrus generated spectacular optical displays, which acted as a tracer for the hurricane cirrus, despite the limited lifetimes of individual ice crystals. Lidar polarization data indicate widespread regions of uniform ice plate orientations, and in situ particle masticator data show a preponderance of pristine, solid hexagonal plates and columns. It is suggested that these unusual aspects are the result of the mode of cirrus particle nucleation, presumably involving the lofting of sea-salt nuclei in thunderstorm updrafts into the upper troposphere. This created a reservoir of haze particles that continued to produce halide-saltcontaminated ice crystals during the extended period of cirrus cloud maintenance. The reference that marine microliters are embedded in the replicas of ice crystals collected over the CART site points to the longevity of marine effects. Various nucleation scenarios proposed for cirrus clouds based on this and other studies, and the implications for understanding cirrus radiative properties or a global scale, are discussed.
Document ID
20020081315
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Sassen, Kenneth
(Utah Univ. Salt Lake City, UT United States)
Arnott, W. Patrick
(Desert Research Inst. Reno, NV United States)
OCStarr, David
(NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, MD United States)
Mace, Gerald G.
(Utah Univ. Salt Lake City, UT United States)
Wang, Zhien
(Utah Univ. Salt Lake City, UT United States)
Poellot, Michael R.
(North Dakota Univ. Grand Forks, ND United States)
Date Acquired
September 7, 2013
Publication Date
March 1, 2002
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG5-6458
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF ATM-01-19502
CONTRACT_GRANT: DE-FG02-ER-1059
CONTRACT_GRANT: DE-FG03-98ER-62571
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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