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https://essopenarchive.org/doi/full/10.22541/essoar.170365352.28240067/v1

*Authors*
Chandru Dhandapani,Colleen M Kaul,Kyle G Pressel,Robert Wood,Gourihar
Kulkarni

*Citations*: Chandru Dhandapani, Colleen M Kaul, Kyle G Pressel, et al.
Sensitivities of Large Eddy Simulations of Aerosol Plume Transport and
Cloud Response. ESS Open Archive . December 27, 2023.
DOI: 10.22541/essoar.170365352.28240067/v1

*27 December 2023*

*Abstract*
Cloud responses to surface-based sources of aerosol perturbation depend in
part on the characteristics of the aerosol transport to cloud base and the
resulting spatial and temporal distribution of aerosol. However,
interactions among aerosol, cloud, and turbulence processes complicate the
prediction of this aerosol transport and can obscure diagnosis of the
aerosols' effects on cloud and turbulence properties. Here, scenarios of
plume injection below a marine stratocumulus cloud are modeled using large
eddy simulations coupled to a prognostic bulk aerosol and cloud
microphysics scheme. Both passive plumes, consisting of an inert tracer,
and active plumes are investigated, where the latter are representative of
saltwater droplet plumes such as have been proposed for marine cloud
brightening. Passive plume scenarios show a spurious in-plume cloud
brightening due solely to the connections between updrafts, cloud
condensation, and scalar transport. Numerical sensitivities are first
assessed to establish a suitable model configuration. Then sensitivity to
particle injection rate is investigated. Trade-offs are identified between
the number of injected particles and the suppressive effect of droplet
evaporation on plume loft and spread. Furthermore, as the in-plume
brightening effect does not depend significantly on injection rate given a
suitable definition of perturbed versus unperturbed regions of the flow,
plume area is a key controlling factor on the overall cloud brightening
effect of an aerosol perturbation.

*Source: ESS OPEN ARCHIVE *

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