Bjorn Stevens
UCLA, Department of Atmospheric Sciences
Entrainment in Stratocumulus Clouds: Computational and Observational
Challenges
Abstract:
Stratocumulus clouds cover large expanses of the earth's surface and
dramatically alter the radiative balance in their local region, and
also globally. A key element to rationalizing climate change is
understanding cloud feedbacks, i.e., how patterns of cloudiness
might change in response to external forcings of the system. In this
talk I review the basic physics of stratocumulus and illustrate how
one particular process, namely entrainment at a stably stratified
interface which tops the cloud layer, plays a central role in
determining the cloud climatology and hence it susceptibility to
external perturbations. Efforts to understand this entrainment
process have thus become a focus of stratocumulus research. In the
second part of my talk I present observational bounds on entrainment
from the recent DYCOMS-II field study. The final part of my talk
discusses how these bounds are being used to construct benchmarks for
large-eddy simulation A particular effort will be made throughout to
clearly express (for an audience of non-specialists) the basic physics
of the problem, how it is framed for study using numerical simulation,
as well as emerging questions and challenges.
Zeit: | Friday,
August 15, 2003, 16.00 Uhr |
Ort: | FU Berlin, Arnimallee 2-6, Raum 032 im EG
|