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Toward Building a Virtual Laboratory to Investigate Rainfall Microphysics at Process Scales

Publication ,  Journal Article
Ji, L; Barros, AP
Published in: Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
June 1, 2024

A 3D numerical model was built to serve as a virtual microphysics laboratory (VML) to investigate rainfall microphysical processes. One key goal for the VML is to elucidate the physical basis of warm precipitation processes toward improving existing parameterizations beyond the constraints of past physical experiments. This manuscript presents results from VML simulations of classical tower experiments of raindrop collisional collection and breakup. The simulations capture large raindrop oscillations in shape and velocity in both horizontal and vertical planes and reveal that drop instability increases with diameter due to the weakening of the surface tension compared with the body force. A detailed evaluation against reference experimental datasets of binary collisions over a wide range of drop sizes shows that the VML reproduces collision outcomes well including coalescence, and disk, sheet, and filament breakups. Furthermore, the VML simulations captured spontaneous breakup, and secondary coalescence and breakup. The breakup type, fragment number, and size distribution are analyzed in the context of collision kinetic energy, diameter ratio, and relative position, with a view to capture the dynamic evolution of the vertical microstructure of rainfall in models and to interpret remote sensing measurements. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Presently, uncertainty in precipitation estimation and prediction remains one of the grand challenges in water cycle studies. This work presents a detailed 3D simulator to characterize the evolution of drop size distributions (DSDs), without the space and functional constraints of laboratory experiments. The virtual microphysics laboratory (VML) is applied to replicate classical tower experiments from which parameterizations of precipitation processes used presently in weather and climate models and remote sensing algorithms were derived. The results presented demonstrate that the VML is a robust tool to capture DSD dynamics at the scale of individual raindrops (precipitation microphysics). VML will be used to characterize DSD dynamics across scales for environmental conditions and weather regimes for which no measurements are available.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences

DOI

EISSN

1520-0469

ISSN

0022-4928

Publication Date

June 1, 2024

Volume

81

Issue

6

Start / End Page

999 / 1017

Related Subject Headings

  • Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
  • 3701 Atmospheric sciences
  • 0401 Atmospheric Sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Ji, L., & Barros, A. P. (2024). Toward Building a Virtual Laboratory to Investigate Rainfall Microphysics at Process Scales. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 81(6), 999–1017. https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-23-0121.1
Ji, L., and A. P. Barros. “Toward Building a Virtual Laboratory to Investigate Rainfall Microphysics at Process Scales.” Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences 81, no. 6 (June 1, 2024): 999–1017. https://doi.org/10.1175/JAS-D-23-0121.1.
Ji L, Barros AP. Toward Building a Virtual Laboratory to Investigate Rainfall Microphysics at Process Scales. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences. 2024 Jun 1;81(6):999–1017.
Ji, L., and A. P. Barros. “Toward Building a Virtual Laboratory to Investigate Rainfall Microphysics at Process Scales.” Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, vol. 81, no. 6, June 2024, pp. 999–1017. Scopus, doi:10.1175/JAS-D-23-0121.1.
Ji L, Barros AP. Toward Building a Virtual Laboratory to Investigate Rainfall Microphysics at Process Scales. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences. 2024 Jun 1;81(6):999–1017.

Published In

Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences

DOI

EISSN

1520-0469

ISSN

0022-4928

Publication Date

June 1, 2024

Volume

81

Issue

6

Start / End Page

999 / 1017

Related Subject Headings

  • Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences
  • 3701 Atmospheric sciences
  • 0401 Atmospheric Sciences