Characterising optical array particle imaging probes: implicationsfor small-ice-crystal observations

The cloud particle concentration, size, and shape data from optical array probes (OAPs) are routinely used to parameterise cloud properties and constrain remote sensing retrievals. This paper characterises the optical response of OAPs using a combination of modelling, laboratory, and field experiments. Significant uncertainties are found to exist with such probes for ice crystal measurements. We describe and test two independent methods to constrain a probe's sample volume that remove the most severely mis-sized particles: (1) greyscale image analysis and (2) co-location using stereoscopic imaging. These methods are tested using field measurements from three research flights in cirrus. For these cases, the new methodologies significantly improve agreement with a holographic imaging probe compared to conventional data-processing protocols, either removing or significantly reducing the concentration of small ice crystals (< 200 µm) in certain conditions. This work suggests that the observational evidence for a ubiquitous mode of small ice particles in ice clouds is likely due to a systematic instrument bias. Size distribution parameterisations based on OAP measurements need to be revisited using these improved methodologies.

Details

Publication status:
Published
Author(s):
Authors: O'Shea, Sebastian, Crosier, Jonathan, Dorsey, James, Gallagher, Louis, Schledewitz, Waldemar, Bower, Keith, Schlenczek, Oliver, Borrmann, Stephan, Cotton, Richard, Westbrook, Christopher, Ulanowski, Zbigniew ORCIDORCID record for Zbigniew Ulanowski

On this site: Joseph Ulanowski
Date:
1 March, 2021
Journal/Source:
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques / 14
Page(s):
1917-1939
Link to published article:
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-14-1917-2021