In the Mexican Intertropical Convergence Zone, particle size distributions within 500 m of cloud boundaries at altitudes of 1000, 2500, and 4200 m, were compared against size distributions at the same levels but 1500 ...In the Mexican Intertropical Convergence Zone, particle size distributions within 500 m of cloud boundaries at altitudes of 1000, 2500, and 4200 m, were compared against size distributions at the same levels but 1500 m away from the clouds. The differences in the distributions near and far from the cloud are related to processes that may change particle properties inside the cloud. Chemical changes in the aerosols are deduced from the particles' refractive index, as derived from comparisons with the scattering coeflcient measured by a nephelometer. An analysis of ten cloud systems indicates that vertical transport of cloud base aerosol followed by entrainment/detrainment is the cloud processing signature most frequently observed in the comparisons (65%). Changes in the chemical composition are observed in approximately 20% of the cases and another 20% of the cases showed removal by precipitation. About 5% of the comparisons showed clear evidence of changes by coalescence. The principal effect of these cloud-processed aerosols is observed in the increase of optical depth in the layer from 30 m to 4200 m in the near-cloud regions, in comparison with the atmosphere further from clouds.展开更多
文摘In the Mexican Intertropical Convergence Zone, particle size distributions within 500 m of cloud boundaries at altitudes of 1000, 2500, and 4200 m, were compared against size distributions at the same levels but 1500 m away from the clouds. The differences in the distributions near and far from the cloud are related to processes that may change particle properties inside the cloud. Chemical changes in the aerosols are deduced from the particles' refractive index, as derived from comparisons with the scattering coeflcient measured by a nephelometer. An analysis of ten cloud systems indicates that vertical transport of cloud base aerosol followed by entrainment/detrainment is the cloud processing signature most frequently observed in the comparisons (65%). Changes in the chemical composition are observed in approximately 20% of the cases and another 20% of the cases showed removal by precipitation. About 5% of the comparisons showed clear evidence of changes by coalescence. The principal effect of these cloud-processed aerosols is observed in the increase of optical depth in the layer from 30 m to 4200 m in the near-cloud regions, in comparison with the atmosphere further from clouds.