bright band
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2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
TIANWEN WEI ◽  
Haiyun Xia ◽  
Kenan Wu ◽  
Yuanjian Yang ◽  
Qi Liu ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (23) ◽  
pp. 17649-17664
Author(s):  
Yang Yi ◽  
Fan Yi ◽  
Fuchao Liu ◽  
Yunpeng Zhang ◽  
Changming Yu ◽  
...  

Abstract. Mid-level stratiform precipitations during the passage of warm fronts were detailedly observed on two occasions (light and moderate rain) by a 355 nm polarization lidar and water vapor Raman lidar, both equipped with waterproof transparent roof windows. The hours-long precipitation streaks shown in the lidar signal (X) and volume depolarization ratio (δv) reveal some ubiquitous features of the microphysical process of precipitating hydrometeors. We find that for the light-rain case precipitation that reaches the surface begins as ice-phase-dominant hydrometeors that fall out of a shallow liquid cloud layer at altitudes above the 0 ∘C isotherm level, and the depolarization ratio magnitude of falling hydrometeors increases from the liquid-water values (δv<0.09) to the ice/snow values (δv>0.20) during the first 100–200 m of their descent. Subsequently, the falling hydrometeors yield a dense layer with an ice/snow bright band occurring above and a liquid-water bright band occurring below (separated by a lidar dark band) as a result of crossing the 0 ∘C level. The ice/snow bright band might be a manifestation of local hydrometeor accumulation. Most falling raindrops shrink or vanish in the liquid-water bright band due to evaporation, whereas a few large raindrops fall out of the layer. We also find that a prominent δv peak (0.10–0.40) always occurs at an altitude of approximately 0.6 km when precipitation reaches the surface, reflecting the collision–coalescence growth of falling large raindrops and their subsequent spontaneous breakup. The microphysical process (at ice-bright-band altitudes and below) of moderate rain resembles that of the light-rain case, but more large-sized hydrometeors are involved.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (21) ◽  
pp. 4323
Author(s):  
Albert Garcia-Benadí ◽  
Joan Bech ◽  
Sergi Gonzalez ◽  
Mireia Udina ◽  
Bernat Codina

The detection and characterisation of the radar Bright Band (BB) are essential for many applications of weather radar quantitative precipitation estimates, such as heavy rainfall surveillance, hydrological modelling or numerical weather prediction data assimilation. This study presents a new technique to detect the radar BB levels (top, peak and bottom) for Doppler radar spectral moments from the vertically pointing radars applied here to a K-band radar, the MRR-Pro (Micro Rain Radar). The methodology includes signal and noise detection and dealiasing schemes to provide realistic vertical Doppler velocities of precipitating hydrometeors, subsequent calculation of Doppler moments and associated parameters and BB detection and characterisation. Retrieved BB properties are compared with the melting level provided by the MRR-Pro manufacturer software and also with the 0 °C levels for both dry-bulb temperature (freezing level) and wet-bulb temperature from co-located radio soundings in 39 days. In addition, a co-located Parsivel disdrometer is used to analyse the equivalent reflectivity of the lowest radar height bins confirming consistent results of the new signal and noise detection scheme. The processing methodology is coded in a Python program called RaProM-Pro which is freely available in the GitHub repository.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 1139-1151
Author(s):  
Zhe Zhang ◽  
Youcun Qi ◽  
Donghuan Li ◽  
Ziwei Zhu ◽  
Meilin Yang ◽  
...  

AbstractHydrological hazards usually occur after heavy precipitation, especially during strong convection. Therefore, accurately identifying convective precipitation is very helpful for hydrological warning and forecasting. However, separating the convective, bright band (BB), and stratiform precipitation is found to be challenging when the convection is adjacent to or within the BB region. A new convection/BB/stratiform precipitation segregation algorithm is proposed in this study to resolve this challenging issue. This algorithm is applicable for a single radar volume scan data in native (polar) coordinates and consists of four processes: 1) check the freezing (0°C) level to roughly assess whether convection is occurring or not; 2) identify the convective cores through analyzing composite reflectivity (maximum reflectivity for a given range gate among all the sweeps), vertically integrated liquid water (VIL), VIL horizontal gradient, and reflectivity at the levels of 0°, −10°, and above −10°C; 3) delineate the whole convective region through the seeded region growing method by taking account of the microphysical differences between the BB and convective regions; and 4) delineate BB features in the stratiform region. The proposed algorithm utilizes the physical characteristics of different precipitation types for precisely segregating the convective, BB, and stratiform precipitation. This algorithm has been tested with radar data of different precipitation events and evaluated with three months of rain gauge data. The results show that the proposed algorithm performs consistently well for challenging precipitation events with the convection adjacent to or within a strong BB. Furthermore, the proposed algorithm could be used to improve the vertical profile of reflectivity (VPR) correction and reduce the overestimation of rainfall in the BB precipitation region.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yang Yi ◽  
Fan Yi ◽  
Fuchao Liu ◽  
Yunpeng Zhang ◽  
Changming Yu ◽  
...  

Abstract. Mid-level stratiform precipitations during the passage of warm front were detailedly observed on two occasions (light and moderate rain) by a 355-nm polarization lidar and water-vapor Raman lidar, both equipped with waterproof transparent roof windows. The hours-long precipitation streaks shown in the lidar signal (X) and volume depolarization ratio (δv) reveal some ubiquitous features of the microphysical process of precipitating hydrometeors. We find that for the light rain case, surface rainfall begins as supercooled liquid-drop-dominated hydrometeors fall out of their liquid parent cloud at altitudes above the 0 °C level, and most liquid drops quickly freeze into ice particles (δv > 0.25) during the first 100–200 m of their descent, where humid aerosol particles exist. Subsequently, the falling hydrometeors yield a dense layer with an ice/snow bright band occurring above and a liquid-water bright band occurring below (separated by a lidar dark band) as a result of crossing the 0 °C level. The ice/snow bright band might be a manifestation of local hydrometeor accumulation. Most falling raindrops shrink or vanish in the liquid-water bright band due to evaporation, whereas a few large raindrops fall out of the layer. We also find that a prominent depolarization δv peak (0.10–0.35) always occurs at an altitude of approximately 0.6 km during surface rainfall, reflecting the collision-coalescence growth of falling large raindrops and their subsequent spontaneous breakup. The microphysical process (at ice-bright-band altitudes and below) of moderate rain resembles that of the light rain case, but more large-sized hydrometeors are involved.


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
Nga Pham Thi-Hong

Laser cladding of Co50 alloy coating and Co50 composite coatings doped with 10, 20, and 30 wt.% TiC particles was performed on the H13 steel surface. The effects of TiC concentration on the phase composition, microstructure, and microhardness of the coatings were studied. The results indicated that, in 10% TiC coating, the “bright band” is a quite flat-growth tissue, while with 20% TiC, the “white bright band” contains a large amount of black TiC particles. The composite coating Co50, 10% TiC, and 20% TiC samples can clearly distinguish the cladding zone, bonding zone, and heat-affected zone, and a good metallurgical bond is formed between the coating and the substrate. The 30% TiC coating and the substrate are not well bonded, which is attributed to the high TiC content in the coating; however, it has the best surface morphology, and there is no porosity on the surface. 10% TiC coatings have poor surface quality, show a spraying material phenomenon on two side edges which is quite serious, and a lot of porosity on the surface of the coating. In addition, 10% TiC coating includes the original TiC particles and primary TiC particles that are precipitated in situ from the liquid phase during solidification; 20% TiC coating indicates a large amount of TiC in the form of cross petals and twigs, and the figure points out that TiC exists like a large number of diffusely distributed spherical structures in the 30% TiC coating. The coatings of TiC/Co composite with less than 20% TiC showed good metallurgical bonding characteristics with the H13 steel surface.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 111-120
Author(s):  
Deffi M Putri ◽  
◽  
Eko Yulianto Nugroho ◽  
Januar Rahmad Pratama ◽  
◽  
...  

Weather radars have several limitations there are bright band echoes and attenuation of electromagnetic wave from radar’s beam. The purpose of this research is to conduct an analysis respect to the result of quality control from both of the limitations in 2019 which divide into four case study. Freezing level height of radiosonde used for support the identification activity of BBC phenomena. The result of BBC can reduce the BBE patterns however, it unable to function optimally in reducing all parts of the BBE patterns. Rainfall attenuation correction that have been done shows various results, either quantitatively or qualitatively. Attenuation correction is able to increase the rainfall value in product image SRI and PAC qualitatively. Quantitative analysis shows that the r and MAE values after attenuation correction of hourly rainfall have a good value besides that the attenuation correction in daily rainfall data is able to improve the estimate by 62.5%.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 214
Author(s):  
Sergey Y. Matrosov

Modeled statistical differential reflectivity–reflectivity (i.e., ZDR–Ze) correspondences for no bright-band warm rain and stratiform bright-band rain are evaluated using measurements from an operational polarimetric weather radar and independent information about rain types from a vertically pointing profiler. It is shown that these relations generally fit observational data satisfactorily. Due to a relative abundance of smaller drops, ZDR values for warm rain are, on average, smaller than those for stratiform rain of the same reflectivity by a factor of about two (in the logarithmic scale). A ZDR–Ze relation, representing a mean of such relations for warm and stratiform rains, can be utilized to distinguish between warm and stratiform rain types using polarimetric radar measurements. When a mean offset of observational ZDR data is accounted for and reflectivities are greater than 16 dBZ, about 70% of stratiform rains and approximately similar amounts of warm rains are classified correctly using the mean ZDR–Ze relation when applied to averaged data. Since rain rate estimators for warm rain are quite different from other common rain types, identifying and treating warm rain as a separate precipitation category can lead to better quantitative precipitation estimations.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (24) ◽  
pp. 4061
Author(s):  
Jeong-Eun Lee ◽  
Sung-Hwa Jung ◽  
Soohyun Kwon

Bright band (BB) characteristics obtained via dual-polarization weather radars elucidate thermodynamic and microphysical processes within precipitation systems. This study identified BB using morphological features from quasi-vertical profiles (QVPs) of polarimetric observations, and their geometric, thermodynamic, and polarimetric characteristics were statistically examined using nine operational S-band weather radars in South Korea. For comparable analysis among weather radars in the network, the calibration biases in reflectivity (ZH) and differential reflectivity (ZDR) were corrected based on self-consistency. The cross-correlation coefficient (ρHV) bias in the weak echo regions was corrected using the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). First, we analyzed the heights of BBPEAK derived from the ZH as a function of season and compared the heights of BBPEAK derived from the ZH, ZDR, and ρHV. The heights of BBPEAK were highest in the summer season when the surface temperature was high. However, they showed distinct differences depending on the location (e.g., latitude) within the radar network, even in the same season. The height where the size of melting particles was at a maximum (BBPEAK from the ZH) was above that where the oblateness of these particles maximized (BBPEAK from ZDR). The height at which the inhomogeneity of hydometeors was at maximum (BBPEAK from the ρHV) was also below that of BBPEAK from the ZH. Second, BB thickness and relative position of BBPEAK were investigated to characterize the geometric structure of the BBs. The BB thickness increased as the ZH at BBBOTTOM increased, which indicated that large snowflakes melt more slowly than small snowflakes. The geometrical structure of the BBs was asymmetric, since the melting particles spent more time forming the thin shell of meltwater around them, and they rapidly collapsed to form a raindrop at the final stage of melting. Third, the heights of BBTOP, BBPEAK, and BBBOTTOM were compared with the zero-isotherm heights. The dry-temperature zero-isotherm heights were between BBTOP and BBBOTTOM, while the wet-bulb temperature zero-isotherm heights were close to the height of BBPEAK. Finally, we examined the polarimetric observations to understand the involved microphysical processes. The correlation among ZH at BBTOP, BBPEAK, and BBBOTTOM was high (>0.94), and the ZDR at BBBOTTOM was high when the BB’s intensity was strong. This proved that the size and concentration of snowflakes above the BB influence the size and concentration of raindrops below the BB. There was no depression in the ρHV for a weak BB. Finally, the mean profile of the ZH and ZDR depended on the ZH at BBBOTTOM. In conclusion, the growth process of snowflakes above the BB controls polarimetric observations of BB.


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (21) ◽  
pp. 3557
Author(s):  
Yang Zhang ◽  
Liping Liu ◽  
Hao Wen

The quality of radar data is crucial for its application. In particular, before radar mosaic and quantitative precipitation estimation (QPE) can be conducted, it is necessary to know the quality of polarimetric parameters. The parameters include the horizontal reflectivity factor, ZH; the differential reflectivity factor, ZDR; the specific differential phase, KDP; and the correlation coefficient, ρHV. A novel radar data quality index (RQI) is specifically developed for the Chinese polarimetric radars. Not only the influences of partial beam blockages and bright band upon radar data quality, but also those of bright band correction performance, signal-to-noise ratio, and non-precipitation echoes are considered in the index. RQI can quantitatively describe the quality of various polarimetric parameters. A new radar mosaic QPE algorithm based on RQI is presented in this study, which can be used in different regions with the default values adjusted according to the characteristics of local radar. RQI in this algorithm is widely used for high-quality polarimetric radar data screening and mosaic data merging. Bright band correction is also performed to errors of polarimetric parameters caused by melting ice particles for warm seasons in this algorithm. This algorithm is validated by using nine rainfall events in Guangdong province, China. Major conclusions are as follows. ZH, ZDR, and KDP in bright band become closer to those under bright band after correction than before. However, the influence of KDP correction upon QPE is not as good as that of ZH and ZDR correction in bright band. Only ZH and ZDR are used to estimate precipitation in the bright band affected area. The new mosaic QPE algorithm can improve QPE performances not only in the beam blocked areas and the bright band affected area, which are far from radars, but also in areas close to the two radars. The sensitivity tests show the new algorithm can perform well and stably for any type of precipitation occurred in warm seasons. This algorithm lays a foundation for regional polarimetric radar mosaic precipitation estimation in China.


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