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  4. Identification of snowfall microphysical processes from Eulerian vertical gradients of polarimetric radar variables
 
research article

Identification of snowfall microphysical processes from Eulerian vertical gradients of polarimetric radar variables

Planat, Noemie
•
Gehring, Josue  
•
Vignon, Etienne  
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June 18, 2021
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques

Polarimetric radar systems are commonly used to study the microphysics of precipitation. While they offer continuous measurements with a large spatial coverage, retrieving information about the microphysical processes that govern the evolution of snowfall from the polarimetric signal is challenging. The present study develops a new method, called process identification based on vertical gradient signs (PIVSs), to spatially identify the occurrence of the main microphysical processes (aggregation and riming, crystal growth by vapor deposition and sublimation) in snowfall from dual-polarization Doppler radar scans. We first derive an analytical framework to assess in which meteorological conditions the local vertical gradients of radar variables reliably inform about microphysical processes. In such conditions, we then identify regions dominated by (i) vapor deposition, (ii) aggregation and riming and (iii) snowflake sublimation and possibly snowflake breakup, based on the sign of the local vertical gradients of the reflectivity Z(H) and the differential reflectivity Z(DR). The method is then applied to data from two frontal snowfall events, namely one in coastal Adelie Land, Antarctica, and one in the Taebaek Mountains in South Korea. The validity of the method is assessed by comparing its outcome with snowflake observations, using a multi-angle snowflake camera, and with the output of a hydrometeor classification, based on polarimetric radar signal. The application of the method further makes it possible to better characterize and understand how snowfall forms, grows and decays in two different geographical and meteorological contexts. In particular, we are able to automatically derive and discuss the altitude and thickness of the layers where each process prevails for both case studies. We infer some microphysical characteristics in terms of radar variables from statistical analysis of the method output (e.g., Z(H) and Z(DR) distribution for each process). We, finally, highlight the potential for extensive application to cold precipitation events in different meteorological contexts.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.5194/amt-14-4543-2021
Web of Science ID

WOS:000664205900003

Author(s)
Planat, Noemie
Gehring, Josue  
Vignon, Etienne  
Berne, Alexis  
Date Issued

2021-06-18

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH

Published in
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Volume

14

Issue

6

Start page

4543

End page

4564

Subjects

Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

•

adelie land

•

hydrometeor classification

•

east antarctica

•

dumont durville

•

winter storms

•

part i

•

precipitation

•

aggregation

•

clouds

•

parameterization

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LTE  
Available on Infoscience
July 17, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/180098
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