Title: Aerosols, precipitation, and cloud seeding
1Aerosols, precipitation, and cloud seeding
- Water in the West
- Evolving Technologies and Emerging Issues
- Irvine, California
- November 15-17, 2006
http//www.ral.ucar.edu/projects/wyoming
2Motivation
- Worldwide water resource stresses
- Severe weather hazards
- New observational, computational, statistical
technologies - Operational programs with little scientific basis
- Population and demographic changes
- Inadvertent weather modification
- ? similar physical processes!
estimates of indirect forcing that include
feedback to the liquid-water path and cloud
amount from changes in cloud microphysics and
precipitation efficiency range from -1.1Wm-2 to
-4.8Wm-2
3The Paradox
- Operational programs in more than 37 countries
worldwide - At least 69 programs in 11 U.S. states in 2004
- Limited funding supporting research as part of
operational programs - Impact of human activity on weather and climate
recognized and heavily funded
4ISSUES
- What dont we know? What do we need to know?
- Design
- Seeding conceptual model (Apply to certain
conditions) - Identification of seedable opportunities (Change
in time and space) - Targeting and method of seeding (Change in time
and space surface versus airborne) - Natural variability (daily, monthly, seasonal)
- Execution
- Decision making system (Optimization of seeding
experiments) - Evaluation
- Statistical (Quantification)
- Physical (Providing confidence for the
statistical results)
5Projects
Current cloud physics and radar-upgrade projects
Recent intl projects involving
equipment/software tech transfer, training, and
outreach in weather modification.
Italy and Greece Upgrade radar infrastructure,
observational project training
Wyoming snowpack enhancement program
Saudi Arabia, Qatar, UAE, Oman aerosol cloud
interactions
Burkina Faso and Mali Upgrade radar
infrastructure and training
Mexico Radar upgrades for NAME, previous
rainfall studies
Indonesia Infrastructure building and
aerosol-cloud interactions
Argentina software upgrades for hail studies
6Key Uncertainties(Possible solutions)What dont
we know? What do we need to know?
- Cloud and precipitation microphysics issues
- Background concentration, sizes, and chemical
composition of aerosols participating in cloud
processes (in-situ and satellite measurements,
models) - Cloud dynamics issues
- Cloud-to-cloud and mesoscale interactions
relating to updraft and downdraft structures and
cloud evolution and lifetimes (Multi-parameter
radar, models) - Cloud modeling issues
- Combination of best cloud models with advanced
observing systems in carefully designed field
tests and experiments (data assimilation,
development of two-way interactive aerosol and
microphysical parameterizations, land-surface
interactions, upgraded and new parameterizations)
7The aerosol/precip connection
- Aerosol environment has changed
- CCN/sulfates are about 70 anthropogenic with
strong variation in emissions geographically - Desert dust concentrations vary widely appear to
be important IN - Clear anthropogenic effects
- (e.g., satellite evidence)
- Well known climate connections
- Direct (reflect incoming solar radiation back to
space) - Indirect (modify properties and lifetime of
clouds) - Linkage to precip understood in principle, but
hard - evidence is scanty and scattered we lack
- quantitative/predictive skill
8Important Point
- Preliminary indications are that aerosol changes
could have changed precipitation processes in
significant ways depending on the background
pollution and aerosols in a specific region.
These results apply both to inadvertent and
advertent weather modification. - Potential differences between start and end of
the rainy season because of washout of aerosols
by rain providing for cleaner conditions towards
the end (Analyses will help determining optimal
time for seeding) - During dry periods aerosol concentrations may
increase and decrease effectiveness of natural
clouds to produce precipitation. Seeding may have
larger positive effects
9So where are we?
- What do we know?
- Much has been learned about natural rainfall and
seeding - Warm vs cold rain
- The fundamental weather mod result AgI seeding
produces lots of ice crystals - The effects of seeding on precipitation are
essentially never as clear-cut as in the stratus
cloud photo. Clouds are complex. - Controversial results regarding AgI seeding for
rain increase from convective clouds - Re-analysis of experiments effects less
clear-cut - Better progress with continued efforts studying
winter orographic snowfall enhancement - Greatly decreased funding since the 80s
10Re-thinking an old method Examples/Case studies
of the use of technology
- Using salt to stimulate collision/coalescence
- Use of pyrotechnic flares
- Background
- Maritime air 20-300 per cm-3 (larger drops)
- Continental air 500-5,000 per cm-3 (smaller)
- It is well known that maritime clouds rain more
easily (the larger droplets collide with each
other more readily)
11Hygroscopic Seeding
Uniform distribution of droplets
Non-uniform distribution
Try to add larger droplets that will initiate
coalescence
12South African program (1990s)
- Initiated a randomized experiment using
hygroscopic flares - Some aircraft measurements
- New evaluation methods
- Used the storm as the experimental unit
- Radar estimated rainfall
- Many more experimental cases
- Objective storm-tracking software (TITAN)
- Allowed for study of time-resolved response to
seeding
13Radar estimate of rainfall within the TITAN
framework
The storm
30
The TITAN experimental unit
45
55
TITAN identifies and tracks individual storms
based on a specified reflectivity threshold
Objective radar estimate of rainfall
14Results from South Africa (Mather et al.)
15Hygroscopic Seeding Results
- South Africa and Mexico
- Quartile analyses to exclude outliers (25, 50
and 75) - Randomized experiments
- Time history of rainfall (seeded-blue
unseeded-red) - To what extent would weather modification
operations be dependent on aerosol concentrations
(see next slide)
South African Experiment
16Aerosol and non-aerosol days classification for
Mexican hygroscopic seeding data
Typical aerosol day (gt.1 optical depth)
Typical non-aerosol day (lt0.1 optical depth)
17Hygroscopic seeding
- Attempt to duplicate the South African experiment
in Mexico showed amazingly similar results - The effect seems to arise because the seeded
storms had a longer lifetime - Not part of the original hypothesis
- Seems to imply a connection between seeding and
storm dynamics - This connection is not well understood
- Hypotheses involve downdraft forcing
- This situation leads to caution about accepting
the results - During the same time frame an experiment in
Thailand using hygroscopic salts also showed
promising results
18Is the rainfall from these storms hydrologically
significant?
Flux in cubic meters per sec
Lets compare with the flow in some major rivers
19Equivalent number of very large storms (5,000
cms) Columbia 2 Mississippi 4
Ganges 6 Zaire 8 Amazon
40
20(No Transcript)
21Attempt at replication in the United Arab Emirates
UAE
- Preliminary airborne measurement program
- Droplet distribution found to be continental
22Results of the randomized statistical experiment
No statistically significant difference between
seed and control cases
TITAN radar image and seeding track
The experiment failed to duplicate the previous
hygroscopic seeding results
23Tentative explanation
Particle images lots of drizzle drops
24Sulawesi, Indonesia
- Clean environment, maritime CCN
- Tropical sounding
- First echoes at 5 to15C (warm rain)
- Efficient natural coalescence process
- Freezing by -5C and ice multiplication
- No point in seeding
25WYOMING SNOWPACK ENHANCEMNET 5-YEAR PILOT
PROGRAM FOLLOWS NAS/NRC RECOMMENDATIONS
26Numerical model simulations of seeding
27Simulated radar reflectivity9 December 2004
10 min after seeding started
Natural case
Seeded case
90 min after seeding started
28TARGETING OF SEEDING MATERIALNE winds middle
of 7 Feb 2004 storm
29Strong SW winds early into 27 Feb 2004 storm
30Evaluation Issues
- Inadvertent weather modification
- Geographical meteorological differences
- Natural variability
- Inadequate understanding of physical processes
- Controversy Unsubstantiated claims
- Independent assessment and evaluation
- Old technology
31The Climate Problem
80 yr. Temp. Rise CMIP 80 yr. Precipitation
Trend ?
Covey et al. 2003
32Daily Precipitation at 2 stations
Monthly Amount 75 mm Amount 75 mm
A B
Frequency 6.7 Intensity 37.5
mm Frequency 67 Intensity 3.75 mm
drought wild fires
local wilting plants
floods soil moisture replenished virtually
no runoff
33S-PolKa Radar
- Mass, Latent Heating Rates, Profiles
- Hydrometeor Identification
- Detection of cloud droplets
- Raindrop size distribution
- Effect of Bragg scatter is less at Ka-band
- Improved cloud microphysical retrieval
(precipitation type, shape, size and
concentration) using both dual-wavelength and
dual-polarization observations
34Real time Aerosol and Environmental Monitoring in
the United Arab EmiratesJoint Dept of Water
Resource Studies, NCAR, NASA, and NRL
DevelopmentAn Example September 12th, 2004
Sept. 12, 2004, had one of the best organized
dust storms of 2004. This coincided with the
UAE2 campaign
Step 4. Based on monitoring such events, improved
weather models are developed and improved.
Dust Concentration (mg m-3)
Eventually, satellite data and observations will
be assimilated directly into the models to
provide an up to the minute assessment of aerosol
and environmental conditions
NCAR
35SummaryWhat is the present state-of-the-art with
respect to this technology?
- Convective clouds produce large amounts of rain
- Comparable to flow in major rivers
- AgI seeding of cumulus clouds for rain
enhancement is a well used technology in many
countries - However, it is not a well proven technology
- Based on experiments in S. Africa, Mexico, and
Thailand, hygroscopic seeding seems promising
under specific circumstances - Though promising, it is not well understood
- There are many new tools available to establish
confidence in seeding technologies
36Summary
- Many factors control the amount of rain from
convective clouds
- Aerosols (both CCN and IN) clearly affect the
cloud particle structure - Very likely affect the rain also (but positively
or negatively?) - However, the exact relationship has proven
difficult to establish
37Aerosol change natural and anthropogenic
Satellite images of pollution effects on clouds
- Can mask seeding effects
- Older experiments may not be relevant today
- Transferring results from one region to another
is very problematic
Mexico 1998
Industries
Indonesian smoke from fires in 1997
38And so
- A program of research should be considered
mandatory even for an operational project - Preliminary measurements
- Aerosol, cloud structure, rainfall climatology
- Should include evaluation of seeding effect
- Need a well designed, randomized experiment to
know if you are spending the sponsors money
wisely - Need to look at hydrologic aspects where does
the water go? - Cost/benefit study
- History tells us its rarely cost beneficial to
take a short-cut around the RD
39Where do we go?
- What are its primary advantages?
- - If shown to be beneficial can be conducted in
region where water is needed. - - Can be suspended at any time in times of
abundant water or potential flooding - - Preliminary cost/benefit calculations are
very attractive in general ranging from 51 to
151 in some cases - - Technologies now exist to assess its benefit
and quantify the effect - What are the most significant challenges or
obstacles? - - Natural variability
- - Climate change (Temperature and Aerosols)
- - Scattered Resources
- What social and economic issues have emerged?
- - Environmental impacts such as silver iodide
seeding - - Extra area seeding effects
- How important will this technology be in meeting
future western water needs and What is its
potential role in an integrated water resources
supply augmentation plan? - - Determined by water managers
- What should be the role of local, state and
federal agencies in facilitating the future
progress and development of this technology? - - Should be coordinated to avoid duplication and
pool resources
40WMO GUIDELINES FOR THE PLANNING OF WEATHER
MODIFICATION ACTIVITIESWhat technical and
environmental challenges must be overcome? What
steps should be taken to best advance this
technology?
- These guidelines are addressed to Members
requesting advice or assistance on weather
modification activities. - Experimental programs should be planned on a
long-term basis because the precipitation
variability is generally much greater than the
increases or decreases claimed for artificial
weather modification. - It is strongly recommended that an objective
evaluation be performed by a group independent of
the operational one. - Acceptance of the results of a weather
modification program depends on the degree of the
scientific objectivity and the consistency with
which the experiment was carried out and the
degree to which this is demonstrated. - Weather modification should be viewed as a part
of an integrated water resources management
strategy. Instant drought relief is difficult to
achieve. - WMO recommends that operational cloud seeding
projects for precipitation modification be
designed to allow evaluation of the results of
seeding through physical measurements.
41Cont.Focused experiments for quantification and
understanding
- To increase the chances of success in a specific
situation, it should be verified through
preliminary studies that - The climatology of clouds and precipitation at
the site indicates the possibility of favorable
conditions for weather modification - Conditions are suitable for the available
modification techniques - Modeling studies support the proposed weather
modification hypothesis - For the frequency with which suitable conditions
occur, the changes resulting from the
modification technique can be detected at an
acceptable level of statistical significance - An operational activity can be carried out at a
cost acceptably lower than the socio-economic
benefit that is likely to result. All prospective
studies require expert judgment and the results
are expected to depend on the site chosen and on
the season.
42SummaryWhat would you tell western governors
about this technology?
- Important Problem
- Water resource management
- Large societal investments
- Inadvertent weather modification effects
- Opportunities
- New observing technologies
- Better models and computing
- Recent interesting research
Establish program with major emphasis on
quantification of the effects of both advertent
and inadvertent weather modification and include
scientific community