4.4 Article

A Robust C-Band Hydrometeor Identification Algorithm and Application to a Long-Term Polarimetric Radar Dataset

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY
Volume 52, Issue 9, Pages 2162-2186

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JAMC-D-12-0275.1

Keywords

Cloud microphysics; Radars; Radar observations

Funding

  1. NASA Precipitation Measurement Mission [NNX10AG88, NNX10AG82G]
  2. NASA Ground Validation Grant [NNX11AD03G]
  3. NASA [148480, 133551, NNX10AG82G, NNX11AD03G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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A new 10-category, polarimetric-based hydrometeor identification algorithm (HID) for C band is developed from theoretical scattering simulations including wet snow, hail, and big drops/melting hail. The HID is applied to data from seven wet seasons in Darwin, Australia, using the polarimetric C-band (C-POL) radar, to investigate microphysical differences between monsoon and break periods. Scattering simulations reveal significant Mie effects with large hail (diameter > 1.5 cm), with reduced reflectivity and enhanced differential reflectivity Z(dr) and specific differential phase K-dp relative to those associated with S band. Wet snow is found to be associated with greatly depreciated correlation coefficient rho(hv) and moderate values of Z(dr). It is noted that large oblate liquid drops can produce the same electromagnetic signatures at C band as melting hail falling quasi stably, resulting in some ambiguity in the HID retrievals. Application of the new HID to seven seasons of C-POL data reveals that hail and big drops/melting hail occur much more frequently during break periods than during monsoon periods. Break periods have a high frequency of vertically aligned ice above 12 km, suggesting the presence of strong electric fields. Reflectivity and mean drop diameter D-0 statistics demonstrate that convective areas in both monsoon and break periods may have robust coalescence or melting precipitation ice processes, leading to enhanced reflectivity and broader distributions of D-0. Conversely, for stratiform regions in both regimes, mean reflectivity decreases below the melting level, indicative of evaporative processes. Break periods also have larger ice water path fractions, indicating substantial mixed-phase precipitation generation as compared with monsoonal periods. In monsoon periods, a larger percentage of precipitation is produced through warm-rain processes.

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