Using KDP Cores as a Downburst Precursor Signature

Author:

Kuster Charles M.123,Bowers Barry R.4,Carlin Jacob T.123,Schuur Terry J.123,Brogden Jeff W.123,Toomey Robert123,Dean Andy5

Affiliation:

1. 1 Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies, Norman Oklahoma

2. 2 NOAA/OAR National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma

3. 3 University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

4. 4 NOAA/National Weather Service, Norman, Oklahoma

5. 5 NOAA/NWS/NCEP Storm Prediction Center, Norman, Oklahoma

Abstract

AbstractDecades of research has investigated processes that contribute to downburst development, as well as identified precursor radar signatures that can accompany these events. These advancements have increased downburst predictability, but downbursts still pose a significant forecast challenge, especially in low-shear environments that produce short-lived single and multicell thunderstorms. Additional information provided by dual-polarization radar data may prove useful in anticipating downburst development. One such radar signature is the KDP core, which can indicate processes such as melting and precipitation loading that increase negative buoyancy and can result in downburst development. Therefore, KDP cores associated with 81 different downbursts across 10 states are examined to explore if this signature could provide forecasters with a reliable and useable downburst precursor signature. KDP core characteristics near the environmental melting layer, vertical gradients of KDP, and environmental conditions were quantified to identify any differences between downbursts of varying intensities. The analysis shows that 1) KDP cores near the environmental melting layer are a reliable signal that a downburst will develop, 2) while using KDP cores to anticipate an impending downburst’s intensity is challenging, larger KDP near the melting layer and larger vertical gradients of KDP are more commonly associated with strong downbursts than weak ones, 3) downbursts occurring in environments with less favorable conditions for downbursts are associated with higher magnitude KDP cores, and 4) KDP cores evolve relatively slowly (typically longer than 15 min), which makes them easily observable with the 5-min volumetric updates currently provided by operational radars.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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