LIN Wenshi, Cholaw BUEH. 2006: The Cloud Processes of a Simulated Moderate Snowfall Event in North China. Adv. Atmos. Sci, 23(2): 235-242., https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-006-0235-7
Citation: LIN Wenshi, Cholaw BUEH. 2006: The Cloud Processes of a Simulated Moderate Snowfall Event in North China. Adv. Atmos. Sci, 23(2): 235-242., https://doi.org/10.1007/s00376-006-0235-7

The Cloud Processes of a Simulated Moderate Snowfall Event in North China

  • The understanding of the cloud processes of snowfall is essential to the artificial enhancement of snow and the numerical simulation of snowfall. The mesoscale model MM5 is used to simulate a moderate snowfall event in North China that occurred during 20–21 December 2002. Thirteen experiments are performed to test the sensitivity of the simulation to the cloud physics with different cumulus parameterization schemes and different options for the Goddard cloud microphysics parameterization schemes. It is shown that the cumulus parameterization scheme has little to do with the simulation result. The results also show that there are only four classes of water substances, namely the cloud water, cloud ice, snow, and vapor, in the simulation of the moderate snowfall event. The analysis of the cloud microphysics budgets in the explicit experiment shows that the condensation of supersaturated vapor, the depositional growth of cloud ice, the initiation of cloud ice, the accretion of cloud ice by snow, the accretion of cloud water by snow, the deposition growth of snow, and the Bergeron process of cloud ice are the dominant cloud microphysical processes in the simulation. The accretion of cloud water by snow and the deposition growth of the snow are equally important in the development of the snow.
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