Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4449779 | Atmospheric Research | 2015 | 16 Pages |
•A balloon borne instrumentation for the acquisition of fog microphysics is presented.•Vertical profiles of LWC, Nt and re were measured in two radiation fogs.•Theoretical considerations regarding vertical LWC distributions have to be adapted.
The present study investigates the validity of a theoretical liquid water content (LWC) profile in fog layers currently used for satellite based ground fog detection, with a special focus on the temporal dynamics during fog life cycle. For this purpose, LWC profiles recorded during two different fog events by means of a tethered balloon borne measurement system are presented and discussed. The results indicate a good agreement in trend and gradient between measured and theoretical LWC profiles during the mature stage of the fog life cycle. The profile obtained during the dissipation stage shows less accordance with the theoretical profile. To improve the agreement between theoretical and measured LWC profiles, the evolutionary stages during the fog life cycle should be incorporated. However, the variability within the prenoted measurements points out that more LWC profiles during a great variety of different fog events have to be collected for a well-justified adaptation of the theoretical LWC profile, considering fog life cycle phases in the future. In general, this underlines the existing knowledge gap regarding the vertical distribution of microphysical properties in natural fogs.