April 1, 2013
Journal Article

A Climatology of Surface Cloud Radiative Effects at the ARM Tropical Western Pacific Sites

Abstract

Cloud radiative effects on surface downwelling fluxes are investigated using long-term datasets from the three Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) sites in the Tropical Western Pacific (TWP) region. The Nauru and Darwin sites show significant variability in sky cover, downwelling radiative fluxes, and surface cloud radiative effect (CRE) due to El NiƱo and the Australian monsoon, respectively, while the Manus site shows little intra-seasonal or interannual variability. Cloud radar measurement of cloud base and top heights are used to define cloud types so that the effect of cloud type on the surface CRE can be examined. Clouds with low bases contribute 71-75% of the surface shortwave (SW) CRE and 66-74% of the surface longwave (LW) CRE at the three TWP sites, while clouds with mid-level bases contribute 8-9% of the SW CRE and 12-14% of the LW CRE, and clouds with high bases contribute 16-19% of the SW CRE and 15-21% of the LW CRE.

Revised: April 22, 2013 | Published: April 1, 2013

Citation

McFarlane S.A., C.N. Long, and J.E. Flaherty. 2013. A Climatology of Surface Cloud Radiative Effects at the ARM Tropical Western Pacific Sites. Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology 52, no. 4:996-1013. PNNL-SA-89006. doi:10.1175/JAMC-D-12-0189.1