Lidar and Triple-Wavelength Doppler Radar Measurements of the Melting Layer: A Revised Model for Dark- and Brightband Phenomena

Author:

Sassen Kenneth1,Campbell James R.1,Zhu Jiang1,Kollias Pavlos2,Shupe Matthew3,Williams Christopher4

Affiliation:

1. Geophysical Institute, University of Alaska Fairbanks, Fairbanks, Alaska

2. Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, Miami, Florida

3. NOAA/Environmental Technology Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

4. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado, and NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

Abstract

Abstract During the recent Cirrus Regional Study of Tropical Anvils and Cirrus Layers (CRYSTAL) Florida Area Cirrus Experiment (FACE) field campaign in southern Florida, rain showers were probed by a 0.523-μm lidar and three (0.32-, 0.86-, and 10.6-cm wavelength) Doppler radars. The full repertoire of backscattering phenomena was observed in the melting region, that is, the various lidar and radar dark and bright bands. In contrast to the ubiquitous 10.6-cm (S band) radar bright band, only intermittent evidence is found at 0.86 cm (K band), and no clear examples of the radar bright band are seen at 0.32 cm (W band), because of the dominance of non-Rayleigh scattering effects. Analysis also reveals that the relatively inconspicuous W-band radar dark band is due to non-Rayleigh effects in large water-coated snowflakes that are high in the melting layer. The lidar dark band exclusively involves mixed-phase particles and is centered where the shrinking snowflakes collapse into raindrops—the point at which spherical particle backscattering mechanisms first come into prominence during snowflake melting. The traditional (S band) radar brightband peak occurs low in the melting region, just above the lidar dark-band minimum. This position is close to where the W-band reflectivities and Doppler velocities reach their plateaus but is well above the height at which the S-band Doppler velocities stop increasing. Thus, the classic radar bright band is dominated by Rayleigh dielectric scattering effects in the few largest melting snowflakes.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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