Can hail and rain nucleate cloud droplets?

ORAL

Abstract

We present results from a laboratory scale moist convection experiment composed of a mixture of pressurized sulphur hexafluoride (SF6 - liquid and vapor phase) and helium (He - gas phase) to mimic the wet (saturated water vapor) and dry components (nitrogen, oxygen etc.) of the earth's atmosphere. We operate the experiments close to critical conditions to allow for homogeneous nucleation of sulphur hexafluoride droplets. The liquid SF6 pool is heated from below and the warm SF6 vapor from the liquid-vapor interface rise and condense underneath the cold top plate. We observe the nucleation of microdroplets in the wake of cold drops falling through the SF6-He atmosphere. Using classical nucleation theory, we show that the nucleation is caused by isobaric cooling of SF6 vapor in the wake of the cold drop. Furthermore, we argue that in an atmospheric cloud, falling hail and large cold raindrops may induce heterogeneous nucleation of microdroplets in their wake. We also observe that under appropriate conditions these microdroplets form a stable horizontal layer, thus separating regions of super and sub-critical saturation.

Authors

  • Prasanth Prabhakaran

    Max Planck Institute for Dyanmics and Self Organization

  • Stephan Weiss

    Max Planck Institut f. Dynamics and Self-Organisation, Max Planck Institute for Dynamics and Self-Organization, Max Planck Institute for Dyanmics and Self Organization

  • Alexei Krekhov

    Max Planck Institute for Dyanmics and Self Organization

  • Alain Pumir

    Max Planck Institute for Dyanmics and Self Organization

  • Eberhard Bodenschatz

    Max Planck Institute for Dyanmics and Self Organization