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contributor authorOury, Stéphane
contributor authorDou, Xiankang
contributor authorTestud, Jacques
date accessioned2017-06-09T14:07:38Z
date available2017-06-09T14:07:38Z
date copyright2000/12/01
date issued2000
identifier issn0894-8763
identifier otherams-12922.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4148315
description abstractDual-beam airborne Doppler radars are commonly used in convection experiments for their ability to describe the dynamical structure of weather systems. However, instrumental limitations impose the use of wavelengths such as X-band, which are largely attenuated through heavy rain. This paper is the second of a series of two, which aim at developing schemes for attenuation correction. The authors? final objective is to improve the estimation of precipitation sampled from airborne radars. The first paper was dealing with the application of ?differential algorithms? (?stereoradar? and ?quad beam?) to the independent retrieval of the specific attenuation and nonattenuated reflectivity, which shed some light on the physics of the precipitation. This second paper develops a more extensive procedure based upon the hybridization of a ?differential? and an ?integral? algorithm. It is much more flexible than the methods proposed in part one and allows full rainfall-rate retrievals in single aircraft experiments. This procedure is applied to the 9 February mesoscale convective system (MCS) study case from Tropical Ocean and Global Atmosphere Coupled Ocean?Atmosphere Response Experiment (TOGA COARE), and the impact of the reflectivity correction on the water budget at the cloud system scale is discussed. As expected, the production of water in the 9 February squall line is maximum below the freezing level and is located in the updraft resulting from the interaction between the warm inflow and rear-to-front cold flow. The authors? analysis shows that the precipitation efficiency in the convective region of the system is 31%. Therefore, the large majority of water vapor condensed into cloud droplets and ice crystals does not immediately reach the surface as precipitation. It travels toward the rear of the system at the speed of the horizontal air motion, which suggests a large contribution of the stratiform area in the global water budget. The same calculation performed using raw attenuated data (without correcting scheme) gives an efficiency of only 19%. That result points out the importance of the correction for attenuation when measured reflectivities are used in rain-rate retrievals and water budgets.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleEstimate of Precipitation from the Dual-Beam Airborne Radars in TOGA COARE. Part II: Precipitation Efficiency in the 9 February 1993 MCS
typeJournal Paper
journal volume39
journal issue12
journal titleJournal of Applied Meteorology
identifier doi10.1175/1520-0450(2000)039<2371:EOPFTD>2.0.CO;2
journal fristpage2371
journal lastpage2384
treeJournal of Applied Meteorology:;2000:;volume( 039 ):;issue: 012
contenttypeFulltext


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