iPyCLES v1.0: A New Isotope-Enabled Large-Eddy Simulator for Mixed-Phase Clouds

Recent field campaigns and advances in observational techniques have yielded a wealth of observations of stable water isotopes in the atmosphere, but the heirarchy of isotope-enabled models is not well-placed to leverage these observation for improving constraints on parameterized physics in global...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hu, Zizhan, Peng, Yiran, Zhu, Mengke, Wright, Jonathon S.
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-2024-828
https://egusphere.copernicus.org/preprints/2024/egusphere-2024-828/
Description
Summary:Recent field campaigns and advances in observational techniques have yielded a wealth of observations of stable water isotopes in the atmosphere, but the heirarchy of isotope-enabled models is not well-placed to leverage these observation for improving constraints on parameterized physics in global models. Here, we introduce the isotope-enabled Python Cloud Large-Eddy Simulation model (iPyCLES) for mixed-phase clouds. Isotopic tracers are implemented in a parallel passive water cycle and experience all processes and phase changes that affect the model's prognostic total water variable. Isotopic fractionation occurs during cloud and precipitation processes as well as surface evaporation, with facilities for applying external forcing. In addition to isotopic tracers, we extend the two-moment warm cloud microphysics scheme to enable prognostic simulation of cloud liquid water and ice while eliminating dependence on saturation adjustment. Relative to a one-moment mixed-phase scheme with saturation adjustment, the new microphysical scheme yields substantial benefits in simulating phase partitioning and isotopic exchange in mixed-phase regions. The LES model is based on an energetically-consistent implementation of the anelastic equations and employs high-order weighted, essentially non-oscillatory numerics, and is therefore theoretically suitable for simulations spanning the gray zone of the convective spectrum. In this initial evaluation, we present the results of test cases for non-precipitating subtropical shallow cumulus, precipitating subtropical shallow cumulus, and precipitating Arctic mixed-phase stratocumulus clouds. The iPyCLES simulations agree well with available observations and previous model simulations in all three cases, with distinct signatures among the cases that highlight the added potential of isotopic tracers. The benefits of the revised microphysics scheme are especially evident in the Arctic mixed-phase cloud test case, with vapor-liquid-ice exchange within the cloud producing a conspicuous ...