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The Impact of Rimed Ice Hydrometeors on Global and Regional Climate
Rimed hydrometeors (graupel or hail) are added to a stratiform cloud scheme for global models and tested in a variety of configurations. Off‐line tests compare well to other cloud microphysics schemes with rimed ice used in mesoscale models. Tests in single column and climate mode show expected prod...
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Published in: | Journal of advances in modeling earth systems 2019-06, Vol.11 (6), p.1543-1562 |
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Main Authors: | , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Rimed hydrometeors (graupel or hail) are added to a stratiform cloud scheme for global models and tested in a variety of configurations. Off‐line tests compare well to other cloud microphysics schemes with rimed ice used in mesoscale models. Tests in single column and climate mode show expected production of small amounts of rimed ice in the middle troposphere and at high latitudes. The overall climate impacts of rimed ice (hail or graupel) at 100‐km horizontal grid spacing are small. There are some changes to partitioning between cloud ice and snow that affect upper troposphere water budgets and clouds. High‐resolution simulations are conducted with a global but regionally refined grid at 14 km over the Contiguous United States. High‐resolution simulations show local production of graupel with realistic size and number concentrations. The maximum graupel frequency at high resolution is over Western U.S. mountain ranges. Differences in total precipitation with the addition of rimed ice in 8‐year simulations are statistically significant only for orographic precipitation over the Cascade and Rocky mountains, reducing model biases when rimed ice is included. Rimed ice slightly improves summer precipitation intensity relative to observations. Thus, while the global climate impact of rimed ice in stratiform clouds may be negligible, there are potentially important and systematic regional effects, particularly for orographic precipitation. Rimed ice in cumulus clouds is not yet treated but is an important next step.
Plain Language Summary
Rimed ice, known commonly as graupel or hail, forms with higher velocity updrafts in clouds, often convective clouds. These updrafts are usually not present for low‐resolution global models used for climate. But graupel and hail are important for simulating the evolution of precipitation correctly. This work describes implementation of graupel and hail into a global climate model, with tests using a suite of models from idealized updrafts up to regional climate experiments with 14‐km resolution. The new cloud physics scheme produces reasonable amounts of graupel especially at regional climate scales. There are few impacts on the simulations, but some shifts in precipitation result. This paper is an important foundation for higher‐resolution global models.
Key Points
Rimed hydrometeors (graupel or hail) are added to a stratiform cloud scheme for global models
Global climate impacts are limited to small increases in ice mass
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ISSN: | 1942-2466 1942-2466 |
DOI: | 10.1029/2018MS001488 |