How moisture shapes low‐level radiative cooling in subsidence regimes

Fildier B, Muller CJ, Pincus R, Fueglistaler S. 2023. How moisture shapes low‐level radiative cooling in subsidence regimes. AGU Advances. 4(3), e2023AV000880.

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Journal Article | Published | English

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Author
Fildier, B.; Muller, Caroline JISTA ; Pincus, R.; Fueglistaler, S.
Department
Abstract
Radiative cooling of the lowest atmospheric levels is of strong importance for modulating atmospheric circulations and organizing convection, but detailed observations and a robust theoretical understanding are lacking. Here we use unprecedented observational constraints from subsidence regimes in the tropical Atlantic to develop a theory for the shape and magnitude of low‐level longwave radiative cooling in clear‐sky, showing peaks larger than 5–10 K/day at the top of the boundary layer. A suite of novel scaling approximations is first developed from simplified spectral theory, in close agreement with the measurements. The radiative cooling peak height is set by the maximum lapse rate in water vapor path, and its magnitude is mainly controlled by the ratio of column relative humidity above and below the peak. We emphasize how elevated intrusions of moist air can reduce low‐level cooling, by sporadically shading the spectral range which effectively cools to space. The efficiency of this spectral shading depends both on water content and altitude of moist intrusions; its height dependence cannot be explained by the temperature difference between the emitting and absorbing layers, but by the decrease of water vapor extinction with altitude. This analytical work can help to narrow the search for low‐level cloud patterns sensitive to radiative‐convective feedbacks: the most organized patterns with largest cloud fractions occur in atmospheres below 10% relative humidity and feel the strongest low‐level cooling. This motivates further assessment of favorable conditions for radiative‐convective feedbacks and a robust quantification of corresponding shallow cloud dynamics in current and warmer climates.
Publishing Year
Date Published
2023-06-01
Journal Title
AGU Advances
Acknowledgement
The authors would like to thank two anonymous reviews and gratefully acknowledge diverse funding agencies and resources used for this work. B.F. and C.M. thank funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (Project CLUSTER, grant agreement no. 805041), and the EUREC4A campaign organizers for giving the opportunity to take part to the campaign and use the data early on. R. P. was supported by the US National Science Foundation (award AGS 19–16908), by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (award NA200AR4310375), and the Vetlesen Foundation.
Volume
4
Issue
3
Article Number
e2023AV000880
eISSN
IST-REx-ID

Cite this

Fildier B, Muller CJ, Pincus R, Fueglistaler S. How moisture shapes low‐level radiative cooling in subsidence regimes. AGU Advances. 2023;4(3). doi:10.1029/2023av000880
Fildier, B., Muller, C. J., Pincus, R., & Fueglistaler, S. (2023). How moisture shapes low‐level radiative cooling in subsidence regimes. AGU Advances. American Geophysical Union. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023av000880
Fildier, B., Caroline J Muller, R. Pincus, and S. Fueglistaler. “How Moisture Shapes Low‐level Radiative Cooling in Subsidence Regimes.” AGU Advances. American Geophysical Union, 2023. https://doi.org/10.1029/2023av000880.
B. Fildier, C. J. Muller, R. Pincus, and S. Fueglistaler, “How moisture shapes low‐level radiative cooling in subsidence regimes,” AGU Advances, vol. 4, no. 3. American Geophysical Union, 2023.
Fildier B, Muller CJ, Pincus R, Fueglistaler S. 2023. How moisture shapes low‐level radiative cooling in subsidence regimes. AGU Advances. 4(3), e2023AV000880.
Fildier, B., et al. “How Moisture Shapes Low‐level Radiative Cooling in Subsidence Regimes.” AGU Advances, vol. 4, no. 3, e2023AV000880, American Geophysical Union, 2023, doi:10.1029/2023av000880.
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