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Remote Sensing of Precipitation A Look at Radar Now and in the Future Western South Dakota Hydrology Conference 23 April 2009 Darren R. Clabo Institute of Atmospheric Sciences, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology
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What is weather radar? How does it work? How is precipitation measured? –Case study Limitations of radar The future Outline http://radar.weather.gov/index.htm NWS WSR-88D Radars Weather Surveillance Radar – 1988 Doppler
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What IS Weather Radar? Radar- Radio Detection and Ranging Radio spectrum of electromagnetic (EM) radiation –Wavelength ~ 10 cm Coherent –Known signal phase and amplitude EM wave polarized in the horizontal
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How Does Radar Work? Emits timed pulses (~2 μs) of EM energy in a beam Scattered by dust, planes, telephone poles, birds, insects, you, precipitation, etc. Some energy returned to radar- backscatter –Retrieve FREQUENCY- Note Doppler shift (tornado detection) AMPLITUDE- Strength of signal, power returned
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How Does Radar Work? Distance is function of time! “Radar Volume” x r = 1 mm
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How Does Radar Work? Two main products: Reflectivity Doppler Velocity And spectrum width…
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How is Precipitation Measured? Returned power converted to total reflectivity- z (mm 6 m -3 ) –Drop number concentration times sixth power of the particle diameter –Radar Reflectivity Factor (Z) in units of [dBZ] as displayed on weather radar
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Reflectivity is HEAVILY weighted to the LARGEST particles in the radar volume How is Precipitation Measured? How does this affect precipitation measurements? CASE STUDY
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Rain shafts have equal VOLUME of water but vastly different drop SIZE characteristics Case Study- Radar Volumes Cloud B Large Raindrops Cloud A Small Raindrops 500 drops/m 3 r = 1 mm 63 drops/m 3 r = 2 mm
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Case Study- Radar Volumes Cloud B Large Raindrops Cloud A Small Raindrops 500 drops/m 3 r = 1 mm 63 drops/m 3 r = 2 mm Z = 45.1 dBZ Z = 54.1 dBZ
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How is Precipitation Measured? Total reflectivity used to estimate precipitation –R-z Relationships (Marshall-Palmer) –R is rainfall rate (mm/hr), z is total reflectivity Cool stratiform- z = 130*R^2 Summer Convective- z = 300*R^1.4
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How is Precipitation Measured? Our case, If z = 300*R^1.4 –Small drop cloud (z = 32000), R = 5.51 mm/hr –Large drop cloud (z = 258048), R = 24.5 mm/hr 4.5X difference in radar derived rainfall rate for SAME VOLUME of water
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ReflectivityOne Hour Precipitation How accurate is this? What do we know about the drops themselves? And what if there are a few LARGE hailstones?
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Knowledge of Drop Size Distribution (DSD) is critical Limitations of Current Radar http://ga.water.usgs.gov/edu/raindropshape.html “Drippy” the unofficial USGS water icon!
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What can give us insight into the DSD? –Dual-Polarimetric radar (NEW) TWO orthogonal EM waves “Two-Dimensional” view of particle Limitations of Current Radar x y x y http://cimms.ou.edu/~schuur/radar.html 1 mm2-3 mm
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Other problems –Beam blockage (those mountains are in the way!) –Attenuation (“rain fade”) –Curvature Effects –Beam broadening/Non-uniform beam filling Dual-Polarimetric Radar can help with these too! –Slated for upgrades in 2010-2012 Limitations of Current Radar
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Conclusions Conventional radar has inherent problems –Hail identification –Knowledge of DSDs –“Beam Effects” Dual-Polarimetric radar solves many of these problems –Sold on premise of better QPE
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Contact information: –Darren.Clabo@mines.sdsmt.edu –Institute of Atmospheric Sciences (605) 394-2291 Questions
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