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We show that the aerosol-cloud-precipitation system exhibits characteristics of the predator-prey problem in the field of population dynamics. Both a detailed large eddy simulation of the dynamics and microphysics of a precipitating shallow boundary layer cloud system and a simpler model built upon basic physical principles, reproduce predator-prey behavior with rain acting as the predator and cloud as the prey. The aerosol is shown to modulate the predator-prey response. Steady-state solution to the proposed model shows the known existence of bistability in cloudiness. Three regimes are identified in the time-dependent solutions: (i) the weakly precipitating regime where cloud and rain coexist in a quasi steady state; (ii) the moderately drizzling regime where limit-cycle behavior in the cloud and rain fields is produced; and (iii) the heavily precipitating clouds where collapse of the boundary layer is predicted. The manifestation of predator-prey behavior in the aerosol-cloud-precipitation system is a further example of the self-organizing properties of the system and suggests that exploiting principles of population dynamics may help reduce complex aerosol-cloud-rain interactions to a more tractable problem.
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Ilan Koren
Weizmann Institute of Science
Graham Feingold
NOAA Chemical Sciences Laboratory
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Weizmann Institute of Science
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory
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Koren et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69e1b36c45c770d357ad3d7c — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1101777108