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How to estimate total differential attenuation due to hydrometeors with ground-based multi-frequency radars?

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posted on 2021-06-24, 11:43 authored by Frédéric Tridon, Alessandro Battaglia, Stefan Kneifel
Abstract. At millimeter wavelengths, attenuation by hydrometeors, such as liquid droplets or large snowflakes, is generally not negligible. When using multi-frequency ground-based radar measurements, it is common practice to use the Rayleigh targets at cloud top as a reference in order to derive attenuation-corrected reflectivities and meaningful dual-frequency ratios (DFR). By capitalizing on this idea, this study describes a new quality-controlled approach aiming at identifying regions of the cloud where particle growth is negligible. The core of the method is the identification of a Rayleigh plateau, i.e. a large enough region near cloud top where the vertical gradient of DFR remains small. By analyzing collocated Ka-W band radar and microwave radiometer (MWR) observations taken at two European sites under various meteorological conditions, it is shown how the resulting estimates of differential path-integrated attenuation (DeltaPIA) can be used to characterize hydrometeor properties. When the DeltaPIA is predominantly produced by cloud liquid droplets, this technique alone can provide accurate estimates of the liquid water path. When combined with MWR observations, this methodology paves the way towards profiling the cloud liquid water and/or quality flagging the MWR retrieval for rain/drizzle contamination and/or estimating the snow differential attenuation.

Funding

This research has been supported by Atmospheric System Research (grant no. DE-SC0017967) and the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) (grant no. KN 1112/2-1).

History

Citation

Atmos. Meas. Tech., 13, 5065–5085, 2020

Author affiliation

Department of Physics and Astronomy

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Atmospheric Measurement Techniques

Volume

13

Issue

9

Pagination

5065–5085

Publisher

Copernicus Publications

issn

1867-1381

eissn

1867-8548

Acceptance date

2020-07-29

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-06-24

Language

en

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