mass_concentration_of_cloud_liquid_water_in_air

complete
Created: Feb. 3, 2020
Proposer: Alison Pamment
Proposed Date: 2020-02-03
Change Date: Feb. 3, 2020, 2:04 p.m.
Term: mass_concentration_of_cloud_liquid_water_in_air
Unit: kg m-3
Unit ref: UKMC
AMIP:
GRIB:
Mass concentration means mass per unit volume and is used in the construction "mass_concentration_of_X_in_Y", where X is a material constituent of Y. A chemical species denoted by X may be described by a single term such as "nitrogen" or a phrase such as "nox_expressed_as_nitrogen". Cloud droplets are spherical and typically a few micrometers to a few tens of micrometers in diameter. An upper limit of 0.2 mm diameter is sometimes used to distinguish between cloud droplets and drizzle drops, but in active cumulus clouds strong updrafts can maintain much larger cloud droplets.
Change Date: Feb. 3, 2020, 2:09 p.m.
Term: mass_concentration_of_cloud_liquid_water_in_air
Unit: kg m-3
Unit ref: UKMC
AMIP:
GRIB:
"Mass concentration" means mass per unit volume and is used in the construction "mass_concentration_of_X_in_Y", where X is a material constituent of Y. A chemical species or biological group denoted by X may be described by a single term such as "nitrogen" or a phrase such as "nox_expressed_as_nitrogen". "Cloud liquid water" refers to the liquid phase of cloud water. A diameter of 0.2 mm has been suggested as an upper limit to the size of drops that shall be regarded as cloud drops; larger drops fall rapidly enough so that only very strong updrafts can sustain them. Any such division is somewhat arbitrary, and active cumulus clouds sometimes contain cloud drops much larger than this. Reference: AMS Glossary http://glossary.ametsoc.org/wiki/Cloud_drop.