Simulations of Polarimetric Radar Signatures of a Supercell Storm Using a Two-Moment Bulk Microphysics Scheme

Author:

Jung Youngsun1,Xue Ming1,Zhang Guifu2

Affiliation:

1. School of Meteorology, and Center for Analysis and Prediction of Storms, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

2. School of Meteorology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

Abstract

Abstract A new general polarimetric radar simulator for nonhydrostatic numerical weather prediction (NWP) models has been developed based on rigorous scattering calculations using the T-matrix method for reflectivity, differential reflectivity, specific differential phase, and copolar cross-correlation coefficient. A continuous melting process accounts for the entire spectrum of varying density and dielectric constants. This simulator is able to simulate polarimetric radar measurements at weather radar frequency bands and can take as input the prognostic variables of high-resolution NWP model simulations using one-, two-, and three-moment microphysics schemes. The simulator was applied at 10.7-cm wavelength to a model-simulated supercell storm using a double-moment (two moment) bulk microphysics scheme to examine its ability to simulate polarimetric signatures reported in observational studies. The simulated fields exhibited realistic polarimetric signatures that include ZDR and KDP columns, ZDR arc, midlevel ZDR and ρhυ rings, hail signature, and KDP foot in terms of their general location, shape, and strength. The authors compared the simulation with one employing a single-moment (SM) microphysics scheme and found that certain signatures, such as ZDR arc, midlevel ZDR, and ρhυ rings, cannot be reproduced with the latter. It is believed to be primarily caused by the limitation of the SM scheme in simulating the shift of the particle size distribution toward larger/smaller diameters, independent of mixing ratio. These results suggest that two- or higher-moment microphysics schemes should be used to adequately describe certain important microphysical processes. They also demonstrate the utility of a well-designed radar simulator for validating numerical models. In addition, the simulator can also serve as a training tool for forecasters to recognize polarimetric signatures that can be reproduced by advanced NWP models.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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