Shipborne Polarimetric Weather Radar: Impact of Ship Movement on Polarimetric Variables at C Band

2014 ◽  
Vol 31 (7) ◽  
pp. 1557-1563 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Thurai ◽  
P. T. May ◽  
A. Protat

Abstract The effect of ship motion on shipborne polarimetric radar measurements is considered at C band. Calculations are carried out by (i) varying the “effective” mean canting angle and (ii) separately examining the elevation dependence. Scattering from a single oblate hydrometeor is considered at first. Equations are derived (i) to convert the measured differential reflectivity for nonzero mean canting angles to those for zero mean canting angle and (ii) to do the corresponding corrections for nonzero elevation angles. Scattering calculations are also performed using the T-matrix method with measured drop size distributions as input. Dependence on mean volume diameter is examined as well as variations of the four main polarimetric parameters. The results show that as long as the ship movement is limited to a roll of less than about 10°–15°, the effects are tolerable. Furthermore, the results from the scattering simulations have been used to provide equations for correction factors that can be applied to compensate for the “apparent” nonzero canting angles and nonzero elevation angles, so that drop size distribution parameters and rainfall rates can be estimated without any bias.

2011 ◽  
Vol 68 (9) ◽  
pp. 1902-1910 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. T. May ◽  
V. N. Bringi ◽  
M. Thurai

Abstract Rain drop size distributions retrieved from polarimetric radar measurements over regularly occurring thunderstorms over the islands north of Darwin, Australia, are used to test if aerosol contributions to the probability distributions of the drop size distribution parameters (median volume diameter and normalized intercept parameter) are detectable. The observations reported herein are such that differences in cloud properties arising from thermodynamic differences are minimized but even so may be a factor. However, there is a clear signature that high aerosol concentrations are correlated with smaller number concentrations and larger drops. This may be associated with enhanced ice multiplication processes for low aerosol concentration storms or other processes such as invigoration of the updrafts.


Atmosphere ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 360 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elisa Adirosi ◽  
Nicoletta Roberto ◽  
Mario Montopoli ◽  
Eugenio Gorgucci ◽  
Luca Baldini

Relations for retrieving precipitation and attenuation information from radar measurements play a key role in radar meteorology. The uncertainty in such relations highly affects the precipitation and attenuation estimates. Weather radar algorithms are often derived by applying regression methods to precipitation measurements and radar observables simulated from datasets of drop size distributions (DSD) using microphysical and electromagnetic assumptions. DSD datasets can be derived from theoretical considerations or obtained from experimental measurements collected throughout the years by disdrometers. Although the relations obtained from experimental disdrometer datasets can be generally considered more representative of a specific climatology, the measuring errors, which depend on the specific type of disdrometer used, introduce an element of uncertainty to the final retrieval algorithms. Eventually, data quality checks and filtering procedures applied to disdrometer measurements play an important role. In this study, we pursue two main goals: (i) evaluate two different techniques for establishing weather radar algorithms from measured DSD, and (ii) investigate to what extent dual-polarization radar algorithms derived from experimental DSD datasets are influenced by the different error structures introduced by the various disdrometer types (namely 2D video disdrometer, first and second generation of OTT Parsivel disdrometer, and Thies Clima disdrometer) used to collect the data. Furthermore, weather radar algorithms optimized for Italian climatology are presented and discussed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 35 (6) ◽  
pp. 1169-1180 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sanja B. Manić ◽  
Merhala Thurai ◽  
V. N. Bringi ◽  
Branislav M. Notaroš

AbstractTwo-dimensional video disdrometer (2DVD) data from a line convection rain event are analyzed using the method of moments surface integral equation (MoM-SIE) via drop-by-drop polarimetric scattering calculations at C band that are compared with radar measurements. Drop geometry of asymmetric drop shapes is reconstructed from 2DVD measurements, and the MoM-SIE model is created by meshing the surface of the drop. The differential reflectivity Zdr calculations for an example asymmetric drop are validated against an industry standard code solution at C band, and the azimuthal dependence of results is documented. Using the MoM-SIE analysis on 2DVD drop-by-drop data (also referred to as simply MoM-SIE), the radar variables [Zh, Zdr, Kdp, ρhv] are computed as a function of time (with 1-min resolution) and compared to C-band radar measurements. The importance of shape variability of asymmetric drops is demonstrated by comparing with the traditional (or “bulk”) method, which uses 1-min averaged drop size distributions and equilibrium oblate shapes. This was especially pronounced for ρhv, where the MoM-SIE method showed lowered values (dip) during the passage of the line convection consistent with radar measurements, unlike the bulk method. The MoM-SIE calculations of [Zh, Zdr, Kdp] agree very well with the radar measurements, whereas linear depolarization ratio (LDR) calculations from the drop-by-drop method are found to be larger than the values from the bulk method, which is consistent with the dip in simulated and radar-measured ρhv. Our calculations show the importance of the variance of shapes resulting from asymmetric drops in the calculation of ρhv and LDR.


2007 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 847-855 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dmitri N. Moisseev ◽  
V. Chandrasekar

Abstract Raindrop size distributions are often assumed to follow a three-parameter gamma distribution. Since rain intensity retrieval from radar observations is an underdetermined problem, there is great interest in finding physical correlations between the parameters of the gamma distribution. One of the more common approaches is to measure naturally occurring drop size distributions (DSDs) using a disdrometer and to find DSD parameters by fitting a gamma distribution to these observations. Often the method of moments is used to retrieve the parameters of a gamma distribution from disdrometer observations. In this work the effect of the method of moments and data filtering on the relation between the parameters of the DSD is investigated, namely, the shape μ and the slope Λ parameters. For this study the disdrometer observations were simulated. In these simulations the gamma distribution parameters Nw, D0, and μ were randomly selected from a wide range of values that are found in rainfall. Then, using simulated disdrometer measurements, DSD parameters were estimated using the method of moments. It is shown that the statistical errors associated with data filtering of disdrometer measurements might produce a spurious relation between μ and Λ parameters. It is also shown that three independent disdrometer measurements can be used to verify the existence of such a relation.


Author(s):  
Ricardo Reinoso-Rondinel ◽  
Marc Schleiss

AbstractConventionally, micro rain radars (MRRs) have been used as a tool to calibrate reflectivity from weather radars, estimate the relation between rainfall rate and reflectivity, and study microphysical processes in precipitation. However, limited attention has been given to the reliability of the retrieved drop size distributions DSDs from MRRs. This study sheds more light on this aspect by examining the sensitivity of retrieved DSDs to the assumptions made to map Doppler spectra into size distributions, and investigates the capability of an MRR to assess polarimetric observations from operational weather radars. For that, an MRR was installed near the Cabauw observatory in the Netherlands, between the IDRA X-band radar and the Herwijnen operational C-band radar. The measurements of the MRR from November 2018 to February 2019 were used to retrieve DSDs and simulate horizontal reflectivity Ze, differential reflectivity ZDR, and specific differential phase KDP in rain. Attention is given to the impact of aliased spectra and right-hand side truncation on the simulation of polarimetric variables. From a quantitative assessment, the correlations of Ze and ZDR between the MRR and Herwijnen radar were 0.93 and 0.70, respectively, while those between the MRR and IDRA were 0.91 and 0.69. However, Ze and ZDR from the Herwijnen radar showed slight biases of 1.07 and 0.25 dB. For IDRA, the corresponding biases were 2.67 and -0.93 dB. Our results show that MRR measurements are advantageous to inspect the calibration of scanning radars and validate polarimetric estimates in rain, provided that the DSDs are correctly retrieved and controlled for quality assurance.


2008 ◽  
Vol 25 (10) ◽  
pp. 1873-1880 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Thurai ◽  
D. Hudak ◽  
V. N. Bringi

Abstract A decrease in copolar correlation coefficient (ρco) at C band has been observed for several rain events with broad drop size distributions (DSDs). Observational evidence comes from simultaneous measurements with a C-band dual-polarization radar and a 2D video disdrometer. The possibility of utilizing the ρco decrease for DSD retrievals is discussed. A preliminary method using the copolar reflectivity, differential reflectivity, and ρco is given for estimating the DSD parameters. Validation is carried out by deriving the differential propagation phase (Φdp) from the estimated DSD parameters and comparing against measurements. The method presented here shows potential but needs to be further assessed in different rain climatologies.


2008 ◽  
Vol 47 (8) ◽  
pp. 2238-2255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qing Cao ◽  
Guifu Zhang ◽  
Edward Brandes ◽  
Terry Schuur ◽  
Alexander Ryzhkov ◽  
...  

Abstract In this paper, data from three 2-dimensional video disdrometers (2DVDs) and an S-band polarimetric radar are used to characterize rain microphysics in Oklahoma. Sampling errors from the 2DVD measurements are quantified through side-by-side comparisons. In an attempt to minimize the sampling errors, a method of sorting and averaging based on two parameters (SATP) is proposed. The shape–slope (μ–Λ) relation of a constrained gamma (C-G) model is then refined for the retrieval of drop size distributions (DSDs) from polarimetric radar measurements. An adjustable term that is based on observed radar reflectivity and differential reflectivity is introduced to make the C-G DSD model more applicable. Radar retrievals using this improved DSD model are shown to provide good agreement with disdrometer observations and to give reasonable results, including in locations near the leading edge of convection where poorly sampled large drops are often observed.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jordan A. Wendt

There have been many studies on the evaluations of drop-size distributions and the parameters that affect these distributions, however, few, if any, have directly compared the relationship between the radar-derived parameters and those parameters that are disdrometer-derived. This study focuses on many different features of thunderstorms that changes the structure of the drop-size distribution (DSD) including: Horizontal reflectivity (ZH), differential reflectivity (ZDR), median drop diameter (D0), the shape parameter of the gamma-distributed DSD ([mu]), and the slope parameter of the gamma-distributed DSD (lambda). This work compares data collected by two disdrometers (OTT PARSIVEL and the Campbell Scientific Present Weather Sensor 100) against DSD parameters derived from dual-polarization radar observations. Using the Warning Decision Support System-Integrated Information (WDSS-II), radar data was merged at 1-km resolution to account for the movement of the precipitation systems before comparing to the 10-minute disdrometer data intervals. It was found that to accurately estimate DSDs from the perspective of using a weather radar, a larger precipitation event is needed. At the beginning and end of a precipitation event the difference between the radar retrieved values of D0, [mu], and [lambda] and those sampled by the disdrometer were much greater than during the middle of the event. Throughout the majority of the cases, the radar-derived reflectivity values were consistently lower than those collected by the disdrometers.


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