Abstract

In the tropical region, convective rain is a dominant rain event. However, very little information is known about the convective rain melting layer. In this paper, S-band dual-polarized radar data is studied in order to identify both the stratiform and convective rain melting layers in the tropical region, with a focus on the convective events. By studying and analyzing the above-mentioned two types of rain events, amongst three radar measurements of reflectivity ( Z ), differential reflectivity ( Z DR ), and cross correlation coefficient ( ρ HV ), the latter one is the best indicator for convective rain melting layer detection. From two years (2014 and 2015) of radar and radiosonde observations, 13 convective rain melting layers are identified with available 0 °C isothermal heights which are derived from radiosonde vertical profiles. By comparing the melting layer top heights with the corresponding 0 °C isothermal heights, it is found that for convective rain events, the threshold to detect melting layer should be modified to ρ HV = 0.95 for the tropical region. The melting layer top and bottom heights are then estimated using the proposed threshold, and it is observed from this study that the thickness of convective rain melting layer is around 2 times that of stratiform rain melting layer which is detected by using the conventional ρ HV = 0.97 .

Highlights

  • The melting layer is the region where the ice crystals melt and transit into raindrop precipitation

  • After applying the classification method to separate the convective rain and stratiform rain on a 3-h event, they found that the melting layer in the convective region showed a marked decrease in ρHV together with an increase in ZDR around the 0 ◦C isothermal height

  • Radiosonde data providing the vertical profiles of temperature information is used to find the 0 ◦C isothermal height as the reference for the melting layer top boundary [1]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The melting layer is the region where the ice crystals melt and transit into raindrop precipitation. After applying the classification method to separate the convective rain and stratiform rain on a 3-h event, they found that the melting layer in the convective region showed a marked decrease in ρHV together with an increase in ZDR around the 0 ◦C isothermal height.

Data Description
Dual-Polarized Weather Radar Data
Radiosonde Data
Identification of Melting Layer for12000Different Rain Cases
Proposed Threshold for Convective Rain Melting Layer Detection
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call