A Comparison of X-Band Polarization Parameters with In Situ Microphysical Measurements in the Comma Head of Two Winter Cyclones

Author:

Finlon Joseph A.1,McFarquhar Greg M.1,Rauber Robert M.1,Plummer David M.1,Jewett Brian F.1,Leon David2,Knupp Kevin R.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Atmospheric Sciences, University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, Urbana, Illinois

2. Department of Atmospheric Science, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming

3. Department of Atmospheric Science, University of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, Alabama

Abstract

AbstractSince the advent of dual-polarization radar, methods of classifying hydrometeors by type from measured polarization variables have been developed. The deterministic approach of existing hydrometeor classification algorithms of assigning only one dominant habit to each radar sample volume does not properly consider the distribution of habits present in that volume, however. During the Profiling of Winter Storms field campaign, the “NSF/NCAR C-130” aircraft, equipped with in situ microphysical probes, made multiple passes through the comma heads of two cyclones as the Mobile Alabama X-band dual-polarization radar performed range–height indicator scans in the same plane as the C-130 flight track. On 14–15 February and 21–22 February 2010, 579 and 202 coincident data points, respectively, were identified when the plane was within 10 s (~1 km) of a radar gate. For all particles that occurred for times within different binned intervals of radar reflectivity ZHH and of differential reflectivity ZDR, the reflectivity-weighted contribution of each habit and the frequency distributions of axis ratio and sphericity were determined. This permitted the determination of habits that dominate particular ZHH and ZDR intervals; only 40% of the ZHHZDR bins were found to have a habit that contributes over 50% to the reflectivity in that bin. Of these bins, only 12% had a habit that contributes over 75% to the reflectivity. These findings show the general lack of dominance of a given habit for a particular ZHH and ZDR and suggest that determining the probability of specific habits in radar volumes may be more suitable than the deterministic methods currently used.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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