Peter Kuma
Science and Software

Poster

Assessment of Southern Ocean clouds and aerosols in the New Zealand Earth System Model using shipborne and ground-based observations Open access

Peter Kuma1, Adrian McDonald1, Olaf Morgenstern2, Sean Hartery1, Mike Harvey2, Simon Parsons1

1University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand
2NIWA, Wellington, New Zealand

Abstract

One of the primary objectives of the New Zealand Earth System Model (NZESM) is to reduce shortwave radiation biases over the Southern Ocean, which are related to deficiencies in representation of clouds and aerosols in this region. This is a subject of active research with multiple hypotheses being tested including cloud microphysics, cloud-aerosol interaction, horizontal homogeneity and differences in frequency of cloud regimes related to different weather systems being examined. Comparison with observations is necessary for the identification and resolution of the deficiencies. Unfortunately, observations in the Southern Ocean are scarce, with satellites providing the most extensive spatial and temporal coverage, especially instruments such as MODIS and ISCCP and active instruments such as radar and lidar on the CloudSat and CALIPSO satellites. However, these instruments lack the capability to observe low-level cloud when there is a higher-level overlapping cloud. We present a new multi-year dataset of shipborne and ground-based ceilometer, radar and aerosol observations in the Southern Ocean, which allows for cloud to be seen ‘from below’ and assess the cloud-aerosol interaction. We also discuss the use the Cloud Feedback Model Intercomparison Project (CFMIP) Observation Simulator Package (COSP) to compare the ceilometer measurements with NZESM simulations. The COSP simulator currently does not support ground-based lidars with a matching wavelength, but we have identified that the ACTSIM lidar simulator in COSP requires only a few modifications to support the analysis of ceilometer data. Using an instrument simulator such as COSP allows us to account for the limited view of the ceilometer and signal attenuation in the atmosphere. We therefore discuss future efforts and extending the capability of the COSP simulator.
Conference:
Deep South Challenge Symposium, Wellington, New Zealand, 4–6 September 2017
Archive:
Zenodo
DOI:
10.5281/zenodo.3764267
Published:
04 September 2017
License:
Open access / Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)
BibTeX: @misc{kuma2017b,
  year={2017},
  note={Deep South Challenge Symposium, Wellington, New Zealand, 4–6 September 2017},
  doi={10.5281/zenodo.3764267},
  url={https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3764267},
  author={Kuma, Peter and McDonald, Adrian and Morgenstern, Olaf and Hartery, Sean and Harvey, Mike and Parsons, Simon},
  title={Assessment of Southern Ocean clouds and aerosols in the New Zealand Earth System Model using shipborne and ground-based observations}
}

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