Logo Logo

Weber, Anna; Pörtge, Veronika; Emde, Claudia; Mayer, Bernhard (2026): Retrieval of cloud thermodynamic phase partitioning from multi-angle polarimetric imaging of Arctic mixed-phase clouds. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 18 (23). pp. 7581-7601. ISSN 1867-8548

[thumbnail of amt-18-7581-2025.pdf] Creative Commons Namensnennung (CC BY)
Veröffentlichte Publikation
amt-18-7581-2025.pdf

Abstract

Mixed-phase clouds are frequently observed in the Arctic and still not well represented in climate and general circulation models. The spatial distribution of cloud thermodynamic phase and its partitioning are important quantities since they affect the radiative effect of clouds as well as cloud life time. In this work, a new quantitative retrieval method of cloud thermodynamic phase partitioning based on multi-angle polarimetry is presented. The polarization signal is sensitive to cloud thermodynamic phase since liquid water and ice particles have different shapes and different optical properties. The basic idea of the retrieval is to fit simulations obtained from a forward operator to measurements in the cloudbow range between 135 and 165° scattering angle and the slope range between 60 and 110° to determine a quantitative ice fraction. Either plane-parallel clouds or three-dimensional (half-spherical) clouds are assumed in the simulations. The retrieval was validated using synthetic data. 3D radiative transfer simulations were performed for different idealized cloud cases as well as for a realistic field of low-level Arctic mixed-phase clouds. As the retrieval is based on polarization, it is sensitive to cloud top. The retrieved ice fraction is here defined as the ratio of the ice optical thickness to the liquid plus ice optical thickness and corresponds to the mean ice fraction of the uppermost cloud layer from cloud top to an optical thickness of about 1 to 2, depending on the solar zenith angle. In addition, the retrieval was applied to measurements of the polarization-resolving cameras of the specMACS instrument during the HALO–(��)3 campaign, providing two-dimensional fields of cloud thermodynamic phase partitioning with a high spatial resolution of about 100 m.

Publikation bearbeiten
Publikation bearbeiten