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  4. Heavy snowfall event over the Swiss Alps: did wind shear impact secondary ice production?
 
research article

Heavy snowfall event over the Swiss Alps: did wind shear impact secondary ice production?

Dedekind, Zane
•
Grazioli, Jacopo  
•
Austin, Philip H.
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February 20, 2023
Atmospheric Chemistry And Physics

The change in wind direction and speed with height, referred to as vertical wind shear, causes enhanced turbulence in the atmosphere. As a result, there are enhanced interactions between ice particles that break up during collisions in clouds which could cause heavy snowfall. For example, intense dual-polarization Doppler signatures in conjunction with strong vertical wind shear were observed by an X-band weather radar during a wintertime high-intensity precipitation event over the Swiss Alps. An enhancement of differential phase shift (Kdp > 1 degrees km(-1)) around -15 degrees C suggested that a large population of oblate ice particles was present in the atmosphere. Here, we show that ice-graupel collisions are a likely origin of this population, probably enhanced by turbulence. We perform sensitivity simulations that include ice-graupel collisions of a cold frontal passage to investigate whether these simulations can capture the event better and whether the vertical wind shear had an impact on the secondary ice production (SIP) rate. The simulations are conducted with the Consortium for Small-scale Modeling (COSMO), at a 1 km horizontal grid spacing in the Davos region in Switzerland. The rime-splintering simulations could not reproduce the high ice crystal number concentrations, produced too large ice particles and therefore overestimated the radar reflectivity. The collisional-breakup simulations reproduced both the measured horizontal reflectivity and the ground-based observations of hydrometeor number concentration more accurately (similar to 20 L-1). During 14:30-15:45 UTC the vertical wind shear strengthened by 60 % within the region favorable for SIP. Calculation of the mutual information between the SIP rate and vertical wind shear and updraft velocity suggests that the SIP rate is best predicted by the vertical wind shear rather than the updraft velocity. The ice-graupel simulations were insensitive to the parameters in the model that control the size threshold for the conversion from ice to graupel and snow to graupel.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.5194/acp-23-2345-2023
Web of Science ID

WOS:000936323700001

Author(s)
Dedekind, Zane
Grazioli, Jacopo  
Austin, Philip H.
Lohmann, Ulrike
Date Issued

2023-02-20

Publisher

Copernicus GmbH

Published in
Atmospheric Chemistry And Physics
Volume

23

Issue

4

Start page

2345

End page

2364

Subjects

Environmental Sciences

•

Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

•

Environmental Sciences & Ecology

•

Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences

•

mixed-phase clouds

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polarimetric radar

•

hydrometeor classification

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winter storms

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microphysics

•

parameterization

•

precipitation

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model

•

prediction

•

aircraft

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LTE  
Available on Infoscience
March 27, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/196489
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