Articles | Volume 25, issue 22
https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-25-16657-2025
© Author(s) 2025. This work is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Lidar observations of cirrus cloud properties with CALIPSO from midlatitudes towards high-latitudes
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- Final revised paper (published on 24 Nov 2025)
- Supplement to the final revised paper
- Preprint (discussion started on 19 Jun 2025)
- Supplement to the preprint
Interactive discussion
Status: closed
Comment types: AC – author | RC – referee | CC – community | EC – editor | CEC – chief editor
| : Report abuse
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RC1: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-2052', Anonymous Referee #1, 25 Jul 2025
- AC2: 'Reply on RC1', Qiang Li, 07 Oct 2025
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RC2: 'Comment on egusphere-2025-2052', Eleni Marinou, 26 Aug 2025
- AC1: 'Reply on RC2', Qiang Li, 07 Oct 2025
Peer review completion
AR – Author's response | RR – Referee report | ED – Editor decision | EF – Editorial file upload
AR by Qiang Li on behalf of the Authors (07 Oct 2025)
Author's response
Author's tracked changes
Manuscript
ED: Referee Nomination & Report Request started (16 Oct 2025) by Andreas Petzold
RR by Eleni Marinou (16 Oct 2025)
RR by Anonymous Referee #1 (17 Oct 2025)
ED: Publish as is (21 Oct 2025) by Andreas Petzold
AR by Qiang Li on behalf of the Authors (22 Oct 2025)
Manuscript
The authors present spaceborne (CALIOP) lidar observations of cirrus clouds and compare the measurements performed at midlatitudes and high latitudes. This is a good contribution to cirrus research at mid to high northern latitudes. However, several parameters are not well defined. The discussion of the results needs to be improved. Uncertainty ranges need to be given.
Minor revisions are needed.
P1, line 10: We need a clear definition of the ‘effective optical depth’. Why do you introduce ‘effective’?
P2, line 57: Here, you could add the recent MOSAiC publication on smoke and cirrus (Ansmann et al., ACP; 2025).
P3-P4: Most of the information on page 3 and page 4 are not needed and could be left out. The shorter the introduction the better. Come to your point of research in 1.5-2 pages!
P4, Eq.(1): Why do you use ‘effective’? It is simply the cirrus optical depth! In this context you may already explain how you get the single-scattering extinction coefficient sigma-ci. How did you correct for multiple scattering? Maybe you use the backscatter coefficient, obtained from the CALIOP observation with a lidar ratio that considers multiple scattering? What lidar ratios does the CALIOP team assume in their retrieval of the cirrus backscatter coefficient? And what lidar ratio do they assume in the multiplication of the backscatter coefficient to obtain the single scattering extinction coefficient? This is important information that is missing in this lidar paper on cirrus optical properties.
More general, how is the extinction coefficient profile determined? How large are the uncertainties when using the Klett technique? I speculate, probably much larger than 50%!
P4, line 123: CALIOP is nadir pointing? It measures at an off-nadir angle of 3°! So, it is off-nadir pointing! One could briefly explain why an off-nadir pointing is selected.
P5, line 149: ‘Occurrence rate’? You probably mean: Frequency of occurrence! The word ‘rate‘ points to occurrence per second. More common is to use ‘Frequency of occurrence’, i.e., number of cirrus layers occurring within a given latitudinal belt within a given season.
P5, line 158: You write: The altitude ranges in which cirrus formed… can be seen in Figure S1. How do you know where cirrus formed? I speculate that you often detect just virga segments far below the height where ice crystal nucleation (in situ cirrus formation) took place. Please, be more clear in this respect. You may also use ‘height interval’ as an alternative to ‘height range’. In conclusion, you mean the height interval in which cirrus segments were found… or cirrus clouds occurred. Please state that clearly!
P6, lines 166-168: The extent, size, or depth of the height interval in which you detected cirrus layers mainly depends on the size or vertical extent of the virga zones, i.e., by the base heights of the detected virga layers. That means: ‘Height range of cirrus formation’ is definitely misleading wording. This hold for the entire page 6.
P7, l 197: The geometrical thickness of a cirrus cloud is obtained from the knowledge of the base and top height of a given cirrus layer. Your definition is confusing (line 197): the geometrical thickness of cirrus cloud is defined as the vertical distribution of cirrus clouds at different latitudes. What do you mean here? What do you want to tell us?
Figure 3 is misleading. You need to improve the figure, you have to write clearly: >0.1km, >0.3km, >1.0 km, >2.0km. Why do you not show histograms? If my interpretation of Figure 3 is correct, most detected cirrus layers have thicknesses from 0.3 to 2 km. I further speculate that thin cirrus layers with 100 to 200 m thickness are probably sublimating virga structures at all. Cirrus nucleation cells show immediately cirrus thicknesses of >300m within 20-30 minutes after nucleation of first ice crystals, resulting from ice growth and sedimentation processes.
P7, line 214-215: better write 39% , 13.5% and 15.5%.
P7, line 219: ‘rate of decrease’ is misleading! You simply mean ‘decrease’
P8, line 223-231: In such a cirrus paper, we need clear information on the CALIOP cirrus data analysis! As I already asked above: how is the extinction coefficient obtained from the CALIOP raw data. What lidar ratios did they use to obtain the Klett solutions for the cirrus backscatter coefficient? Please, provide numbers here. The lidar ratios, used in the Klett procedure, consider multiple scattering. Afterwards, the multiple-scattering-corrected cirrus backscatter coefficients is obtained. What lidar ratio did they use next to obtain the respective single-scattering extinction coefficient? This extinction profile can then finally be used to calculate the cirrus optical depth. It is simply not sufficient here to provide the reference Vaughan et al. (2009). At the end, we need to know how large the uncertainty in the used cirrus optical depths are! The use of ‘effective optical depth’ is confusing for all non-lidar scientists.
P8, line 232: The discussion of extinction coefficients shown in Figure 4 must include the uncertainty in the CALIOP retrieval products. The solutions for the extinction coefficients could be compared with the ones shown for the MOSAiC cirrus clouds (Ansmann et al., 2025) and also with other studies mentioned in that paper.
P9. Yes, there may be a daytime vs nighttime difference in the cirrus extinction coefficient. But daytime CALIOP data are much noisier than nighttime data… and the Klett solutions may be much more uncertain for daytime cirrus cases than for nighttime cirrus cases. Therefore, we need the CALIOP extinction uncertainty information! Trustworthy uncertainty numbers start at 50%! Uncertainties are larger for noisy daytime data than for less noisy nighttime data.
P10: In Fig.6 (and S6-S8), I do not see a clear change of the particle depolarization ratio with latitude, only a weak tendency. The variability indicated by the size of the boxes and bars is so large that a clear dependence is not obtained.
Also the differences (HL vs ML depolarization ratios) are quite small, and if day vs nighttime observations show strong differences one must be careful in the interpretation of the results because of the different background noise impact on nighttime vs daytime products.
Please, provide your hypothesis on the link between aviation (stronger at daytime), crystal size, and depolarization earlier, i.e., already on page 10. What about the impact of shape…. plates vs columns … on the depolarization ratio? Could be discussed as well.
P13: What about the impact of wildfire smoke on cirrus evolution? Should be included in the discussion. Furthermore, long-range transport of aerosol in the (upper) free troposphere occurs everywhere, at all latitudes. So, why should there be a decrease of the aerosol content in the upper troposphere with increasing latitude?
P14: Conclusions should be compact and short. Again you write: Cloud formation shows a clear decrease with latitudes. Maybe!, but you observed cirrus features from the top to the virga bottom. The height distribution of cirrus formation cannot be derived from CALIOP cirrus observations.
P14, lines 444-446: Again these temperatures are related to all cirrus observations, but not exclusively to locations of cirrus formation.
P15, l 452: You do not have measured aerosol concentrations! You did not report any aerosol observation (including typing) for the upper troposphere. So this last paragraph presents mainly your speculative ideas, rather than clear observations. It seems to be that wildfire smoke plays a major role in the upper troposphere over the mid latitudes as well as over the high latitudes, especially since the strong Canadian wildfires in the autumn of 2017. However, all these statements are just hypotheses. Please state that clearly!
Figure 1: dashed lines are shifted by 3%? What does that mean? a), b), c), d) is missing
Figure 2: You mean ‘Frequency of Occurrence’? a), b), c), d) is missing
Figure 3: Occurrence frequency! No longer OR. a), b), c), d) is missing
Figure 4: a) and b) is missing. Uncertainty bars (SD bars) are missing. They would show how trustworthy the observed differences are.
Figure 5: a), b), c), d), e), and f) is missing. The values could be compared with other studies (e.g., Ansmann et al., 2025).
Figure 6: a), b), c), d), e), and f) is missing. Very harmonic data, a tendency is visible…
Figure 8: a), b), c), d), e), and f) is missing. What can we learn from a distribution of temperatures linked to the detection of cirrus filaments and structures. The shown temperatures do not show cirrus formation temperatures.