TY - JOUR
T1 - Estimation of liquid water path below the melting layer in stratiform precipitation systems using radar measurements during MC3E
AU - Tian, Jingjing
AU - Dong, Xiquan
AU - Xi, Baike
AU - Williams, Christopher R.
AU - Wu, Peng
N1 - Funding Information:
Financial support. This research has been supported by the DOE
Funding Information:
CMDV project (grant no. DE-SC0017015), the NASA CERES project (grant no. NNX17AC52G), and the DOE ASR project (grant no. DE-SC0014294).
Funding Information:
Acknowledgements. Jingjing Tian and Xiquan Dong are supported by the DOE CMDV project under grant DE-SC0017015 at the University of Arizona, and Baike Xi is supported by the NASA CERES project under grant NNX17AC52G at the University of Arizona. Christopher R. Williams is supported by the DOE ASR project under grant DE-SC0014294. Special thanks to Sergey Matrosov from NOAA Earth System Research Laboratory (ESRL) for his suggestions. Special thanks are given to Michael Jensen, PI of MC3E. The authors gratefully acknowledge the constructive comments by Alessandro Battaglia and one anonymous referee who helped improve the paper.
Publisher Copyright:
© Author(s) 2019.
PY - 2019/7/11
Y1 - 2019/7/11
N2 - In this study, the liquid water path (LWP) below the melting layer in stratiform precipitation systems is retrieved, which is a combination of rain liquid water path (RLWP) and cloud liquid water path (CLWP). The retrieval algorithm uses measurements from the vertically pointing radars (VPRs) at 35 and 3 GHz operated by the US Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) during the field campaign Midlatitude Continental Convective Clouds Experiment (MC3E). The measured radar reflectivity and mean Doppler velocity from both VPRs and spectrum width from the 35 GHz radar are utilized. With the aid of the cloud base detected by a ceilometer, the LWP in the liquid layer is retrieved under two different situations: (I) no cloud exists below the melting base, and (II) cloud exists below the melting base. In (I), LWP is primarily contributed from raindrops only, i.e., RLWP, which is estimated by analyzing the Doppler velocity differences between two VPRs. In (II), cloud particles and raindrops coexist below the melting base. The CLWP is estimated using a modified attenuation-based algorithm. Two stratiform precipitation cases (20 and 11 May 2011) during MC3E are illustrated for two situations, respectively. With a total of 13 h of samples during MC3E, statistical results show that the occurrence of cloud particles below the melting base is low (9 %); however, the mean CLWP value can be up to 0.56 kgm-2, which is much larger than the RLWP (0.10 kgm-2). When only raindrops exist below the melting base, the average RLWP value is larger (0.32 kgm-2) than the with-cloud situation. The overall mean LWP below the melting base is 0.34 kgm-2 for stratiform systems during MC3E.
AB - In this study, the liquid water path (LWP) below the melting layer in stratiform precipitation systems is retrieved, which is a combination of rain liquid water path (RLWP) and cloud liquid water path (CLWP). The retrieval algorithm uses measurements from the vertically pointing radars (VPRs) at 35 and 3 GHz operated by the US Department of Energy Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) during the field campaign Midlatitude Continental Convective Clouds Experiment (MC3E). The measured radar reflectivity and mean Doppler velocity from both VPRs and spectrum width from the 35 GHz radar are utilized. With the aid of the cloud base detected by a ceilometer, the LWP in the liquid layer is retrieved under two different situations: (I) no cloud exists below the melting base, and (II) cloud exists below the melting base. In (I), LWP is primarily contributed from raindrops only, i.e., RLWP, which is estimated by analyzing the Doppler velocity differences between two VPRs. In (II), cloud particles and raindrops coexist below the melting base. The CLWP is estimated using a modified attenuation-based algorithm. Two stratiform precipitation cases (20 and 11 May 2011) during MC3E are illustrated for two situations, respectively. With a total of 13 h of samples during MC3E, statistical results show that the occurrence of cloud particles below the melting base is low (9 %); however, the mean CLWP value can be up to 0.56 kgm-2, which is much larger than the RLWP (0.10 kgm-2). When only raindrops exist below the melting base, the average RLWP value is larger (0.32 kgm-2) than the with-cloud situation. The overall mean LWP below the melting base is 0.34 kgm-2 for stratiform systems during MC3E.
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U2 - 10.5194/amt-12-3743-2019
DO - 10.5194/amt-12-3743-2019
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85068796251
SN - 1867-1381
VL - 12
SP - 3743
EP - 3759
JO - Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
JF - Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
IS - 7
ER -