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contributor authorKaylee Heimes
contributor authorTroy J. Zaremba
contributor authorRobert M. Rauber
contributor authorSarah A. Tessendorf
contributor authorLulin Xue
contributor authorKyoko Ikeda
contributor authorBart Geerts
contributor authorJeffrey French
contributor authorKatja Friedrich
contributor authorRoy M. Rasmussen
contributor authorMelvin L. Kunkel
contributor authorDerek R. Blestrud
date accessioned2023-04-12T18:26:52Z
date available2023-04-12T18:26:52Z
date copyright2022/11/04
date issued2022
identifier otherJAMC-D-21-0230.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4289685
description abstractIn Part II, two classes of vertical motions, fixed (associated with vertically propagating gravity waves tied to flow over topography) and transient (associated primarily with vertical wind shear and conditional instability within passing weather systems), were diagnosed over the Payette River basin of Idaho during the Seeded and Natural Orographic Wintertime Clouds: The Idaho Experiment (SNOWIE). This paper compares vertical motions retrieved from airborne Doppler radial velocity measurements with those from a 900-m-resolution model simulation to determine the impact of transient vertical motions on trajectories of ice particles initiated by airborne cloud seeding. An orographic forcing index, developed to compare vertical motion fields retrieved from the radar with the model, showed that fixed vertical motions were well resolved by the model while transient vertical motions were not. Particle trajectories were calculated for 75 cross-sectional pairs, each differing only by the observed and modeled vertical motion field. Wind fields and particle terminal velocities were otherwise identical in both trajectories so that the impact of transient vertical circulations on particle trajectories could be isolated. In 66.7% of flight-leg pairs, the distance traveled by particles in the model and observations differed by less than 5 km with transient features having minimal impact. In 9.3% of the pairs, model and observation trajectories landed within the ideal target seeding elevation range (>2000 m), whereas, in 77.3% of the pairs, both trajectories landed below the ideal target elevation. Particles in the observations and model descended into valleys on the mountains’ lee sides in 94.2% of cases in which particles traveled less than 37 km.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleVertical Motions in Orographic Cloud Systems over the Payette River Basin. Part III: An Evaluation of the Impact of Transient Vertical Motions on Targeting during Orographic Cloud Seeding Operations
typeJournal Paper
journal volume61
journal issue11
journal titleJournal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
identifier doi10.1175/JAMC-D-21-0230.1
journal fristpage1753
journal lastpage1777
page1753–1777
treeJournal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology:;2022:;volume( 061 ):;issue: 011
contenttypeFulltext


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