The UV-LIDAR: A tool for investigating Aerosol-Cloud Interactions: A case study on Ascension Island

Climate change and human influences are widely investigated. However, the processes of aerosol-cloud interactions are still not adequately known and the associated lack of knowledge causes uncertainties in climate change prediction. Therefore this study presents different approaches to investigate t...

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Main Author: Tenner, Elma (author)
Other Authors: Russchenberg, Herman (mentor), de Graaf, Martin (mentor), Donovan, Dave (mentor), Unal, Christine (mentor), Coenders, Miriam (mentor), Delft University of Technology (degree granting institution)
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2fa8eb2d-3523-4611-a006-7aa5f52e8ecd
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author Tenner, Elma (author)
author2 Russchenberg, Herman (mentor)
de Graaf, Martin (mentor)
Donovan, Dave (mentor)
Unal, Christine (mentor)
Coenders, Miriam (mentor)
Delft University of Technology (degree granting institution)
author_facet Tenner, Elma (author)
author_sort Tenner, Elma (author)
collection Delft University of Technology: Institutional Repository
description Climate change and human influences are widely investigated. However, the processes of aerosol-cloud interactions are still not adequately known and the associated lack of knowledge causes uncertainties in climate change prediction. Therefore this study presents different approaches to investigate those interactions, in particular the Twomey-effect, which states that an increase in aerosol loading leads to an increase in cloud drop number density and a decrease in cloud drop effective radius, considering constant liquid water path. The data analysed was obtained during the ASCII campaign 2016 at Ascension Island. Cloud and aerosol measurements were done by an ultra-violet (UV) lidar during the month September 2016. The cloud microphysical properties - cloud drop number density and cloud drop effective radius - were retrieved using the cloud property inversion retrieval algorithm. The cloud effective radius varied between 1.88 and 4.48 $\mu m$. The cloud drop number density had values in the range of 228-1690 $cm^{-3}$. Furthermore, the total aerosol profiles for clear sky scenes and the aerosol profiles below clouds were retrieved, solving the boundary-value-problem using the ’Klett’ approach. For the aerosol profiles below clouds an extra factor was introduced, accounting for multiple scattering inside the clouds. The aerosol loading arrived at Ascension Island came mainly from the South (Atlantic Ocean) in the lower 1200m or from the East (African continent, biomass burning events) above 1200m. The aerosol-cloud interactions were examined for both the clear sky and the below cloud aerosols with the cloud properties. Both approaches gave evidence for the Twomey-effect. Those results suggest that the UV-lidar is a suitable instrument for investigation of aerosol-cloud interactions. Future projects can use those approaches to gain more knowledge over the interactions, enabling a major improvement of climate change predictions. Ascension Island Initiative 2016 (ASCII)
format Master Thesis
genre South Atlantic Ocean
genre_facet South Atlantic Ocean
geographic Twomey
geographic_facet Twomey
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institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(161.683,161.683,-71.500,-71.500)
op_collection_id fttudelft
op_relation http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2fa8eb2d-3523-4611-a006-7aa5f52e8ecd
op_rights © 2017 Elma Tenner
publishDate 2017
record_format openpolar
spelling fttudelft:oai:tudelft.nl:uuid:2fa8eb2d-3523-4611-a006-7aa5f52e8ecd 2025-01-17T00:50:10+00:00 The UV-LIDAR: A tool for investigating Aerosol-Cloud Interactions: A case study on Ascension Island Tenner, Elma (author) Russchenberg, Herman (mentor) de Graaf, Martin (mentor) Donovan, Dave (mentor) Unal, Christine (mentor) Coenders, Miriam (mentor) Delft University of Technology (degree granting institution) 2017-07-07 http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2fa8eb2d-3523-4611-a006-7aa5f52e8ecd en eng http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2fa8eb2d-3523-4611-a006-7aa5f52e8ecd © 2017 Elma Tenner Aerosol-Cloud Interactions LIDAR Aerosol profiles Microphysical cloud properties master thesis 2017 fttudelft 2023-07-08T19:59:45Z Climate change and human influences are widely investigated. However, the processes of aerosol-cloud interactions are still not adequately known and the associated lack of knowledge causes uncertainties in climate change prediction. Therefore this study presents different approaches to investigate those interactions, in particular the Twomey-effect, which states that an increase in aerosol loading leads to an increase in cloud drop number density and a decrease in cloud drop effective radius, considering constant liquid water path. The data analysed was obtained during the ASCII campaign 2016 at Ascension Island. Cloud and aerosol measurements were done by an ultra-violet (UV) lidar during the month September 2016. The cloud microphysical properties - cloud drop number density and cloud drop effective radius - were retrieved using the cloud property inversion retrieval algorithm. The cloud effective radius varied between 1.88 and 4.48 $\mu m$. The cloud drop number density had values in the range of 228-1690 $cm^{-3}$. Furthermore, the total aerosol profiles for clear sky scenes and the aerosol profiles below clouds were retrieved, solving the boundary-value-problem using the ’Klett’ approach. For the aerosol profiles below clouds an extra factor was introduced, accounting for multiple scattering inside the clouds. The aerosol loading arrived at Ascension Island came mainly from the South (Atlantic Ocean) in the lower 1200m or from the East (African continent, biomass burning events) above 1200m. The aerosol-cloud interactions were examined for both the clear sky and the below cloud aerosols with the cloud properties. Both approaches gave evidence for the Twomey-effect. Those results suggest that the UV-lidar is a suitable instrument for investigation of aerosol-cloud interactions. Future projects can use those approaches to gain more knowledge over the interactions, enabling a major improvement of climate change predictions. Ascension Island Initiative 2016 (ASCII) Master Thesis South Atlantic Ocean Delft University of Technology: Institutional Repository Twomey ENVELOPE(161.683,161.683,-71.500,-71.500)
spellingShingle Aerosol-Cloud Interactions
LIDAR
Aerosol profiles
Microphysical cloud properties
Tenner, Elma (author)
The UV-LIDAR: A tool for investigating Aerosol-Cloud Interactions: A case study on Ascension Island
title The UV-LIDAR: A tool for investigating Aerosol-Cloud Interactions: A case study on Ascension Island
title_full The UV-LIDAR: A tool for investigating Aerosol-Cloud Interactions: A case study on Ascension Island
title_fullStr The UV-LIDAR: A tool for investigating Aerosol-Cloud Interactions: A case study on Ascension Island
title_full_unstemmed The UV-LIDAR: A tool for investigating Aerosol-Cloud Interactions: A case study on Ascension Island
title_short The UV-LIDAR: A tool for investigating Aerosol-Cloud Interactions: A case study on Ascension Island
title_sort uv-lidar: a tool for investigating aerosol-cloud interactions: a case study on ascension island
topic Aerosol-Cloud Interactions
LIDAR
Aerosol profiles
Microphysical cloud properties
topic_facet Aerosol-Cloud Interactions
LIDAR
Aerosol profiles
Microphysical cloud properties
url http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2fa8eb2d-3523-4611-a006-7aa5f52e8ecd