Dear Bruno,

Thank you for proposing the names and definitions for liquid water quantities 
in air.  I think the names themselves are fine.

As regards the various droplet sizes, I found the following definitions in the 
AMS Glossary (http://amsglossary.allenpress.com/glossary). 

Cloud drop - "A spherical particle of liquid water, a few micrometers to a few 
tens of micrometers diameter" but later it says "A diameter of 0.2 mm has been 
suggested as an upper limit to the size of drops that shall be regarded as 
cloud drops; larger drops fall rapidly enough so that only very strong updrafts 
can sustain them. Any such division is somewhat arbitrary, and active cumulus 
clouds sometimes contain cloud drops much larger than this."

Drizzle drop - A drop of water of diameter 0.2-0.5 mm (0.008-0.02 in.) falling 
usually (but not always) from low stratus or stratocumulus cloud.

Rain drop - A drop of water of diameter greater than 0.5 mm falling through the 
atmosphere.

The range of rain drop diameters is similar to that suggested in your own 
explanations, but the division between cloud drops and drizzle is rather 
different. Would the AMS diameters be acceptable to you?  Whatever size ranges 
we choose to quote, I think that all the standard name explanations will need 
to make clear that the numbers should be regarded as indicative rather than 
definitive.

Best wishes,
Alison

------
Alison Pamment                          Tel: +44 1235 778065
NCAS/British Atmospheric Data Centre    Fax: +44 1235 446314
Rutherford Appleton Laboratory          Email: [email protected]
Chilton, Didcot, OX11 0QX, U.K.

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:cf-metadata-
> [email protected]] On Behalf Of Bruno PIGUET
> Sent: 24 November 2010 09:45
> To: cf-metadata
> Subject: [CF-metadata] Proposing new standard names.
> 
> Dear all,
> 
>    Last month, I wrote about the lack of variable name for a local
> measurement of liquid water content.
> 
>    Jonathan Gregory made some constructive remarks, and, since then,
> nobody opposed.
> 
>    So, I would like to have these names added in the the next version
> of the official list. What is the proper procedure ? Is there some kind
> of formal proposal to write (a RFC) ?
> 
> I recall hereafter what we came up to. Definition and size limits are
> my own, I couldn't find any definitive and authoritative numerical
> values, so I used "commonly accepted" ones. Do yous think that we
> should add "about" ou "approximately" before the numbers in the
> definition ?
> 
> mass_concentration_of_cloud_liquid_water_in_air
>   Mass concentration means mass per unit volume. Cloud_liquid_water
> means droplet that are not large enough to fall under common
> circonstances (up to 40 µm diameter).
> 
> mass_concentration_of_drizzle_in_air
>   Mass concentration means mass per unit volume. Drizzle means droplets
> with diameter between 40 and 700 µm.
> 
> mass_concentration_of_rain_in_air
>   Mass concentration means mass per unit volume. Rain means drops of
> diameter larger than 0.7 mm. This quantity  corresponds to
> mass_fraction_of_rain_in_air (which is expressed as ratio of the mass
> of rain to the mass of air plus rain).
> 
> mass_concentration_of_liquid_water_in_air
>   Mass concentration means mass per unit volume. All kinds of droplets
> and drops are taken into account, whatever their sizes or falling
> speed.
> 
> 
> Bruno.
> --
> 
> Bruno PIGUET
>  Mèl : [email protected] |  GAME : URA CNRS & METEO-FRANCE
>  Tel : +33 (0)5 61 07 96 59  |       CNRM/GMEI/TRAMM
>  Fax : +33 (0)5 61 07 96 27  |       42 Av. G. Coriolis
>  Sec : +33 (0)5 61 07 96 63  |     31057  TOULOUSE cedex 1
-- 
Scanned by iCritical.
_______________________________________________
CF-metadata mailing list
[email protected]
http://mailman.cgd.ucar.edu/mailman/listinfo/cf-metadata

Reply via email to