Vertical Air Motions and Raindrop Size Distributions Estimated Using Mean Doppler Velocity Difference From 3- and 35-GHz Vertically Pointing Radars

Vertical profiles of vertical air motion and raindrop size distributions (DSDs) within stratiform rain are estimated using two collocated vertically pointing radars (VPRs) operating at 3 and 35 GHz. Different raindrop backscattering cross sections occur at 3 and 35 GHz with Rayleigh scattering occur...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE transactions on geoscience and remote sensing 2016-10, Vol.54 (10), p.6048-6060
Hauptverfasser: Williams, Christopher R., Beauchamp, Robert M., Chandrasekar, V.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Vertical profiles of vertical air motion and raindrop size distributions (DSDs) within stratiform rain are estimated using two collocated vertically pointing radars (VPRs) operating at 3 and 35 GHz. Different raindrop backscattering cross sections occur at 3 and 35 GHz with Rayleigh scattering occurring for all raindrops at 3 GHz and Mie scattering occurring for larger raindrops at 35 GHz. This frequency-dependent backscattering cross section causes differently shaped reflectivity-weighted Doppler velocity spectra leading to radar transmit frequency-dependent radar moments of intrinsic reflectivity factor, mean Doppler velocity, and spectrum variance. The retrieval method described herein uses four radar moments as inputs to retrieve four outputs at each height within a precipitation column. The inputs include 3-GHz VPR mean Doppler velocity and unattenuated reflectivity factor and 35-GHz VPR mean Doppler velocity and spectrum variance. The outputs include vertical air motion and three parameters of a gamma-shaped DSD. To account for different VPR sample volumes, radar observations were accumulated over 45 s and over several range gates to represent time-space scales larger than either VPR sample volumes. Observed variability over this common time-space scale is used to estimate retrieval uncertainties. The retrieved air motions and DSD parameters compare well against retrievals from a collocated 449-MHz VPR that estimated air motions from Bragg scattering signals and DSD parameters from Rayleigh scattering signals.
ISSN:0196-2892
1558-0644
DOI:10.1109/TGRS.2016.2580526