Abstract

The Doppler velocity dealiasing technique based on alias-robust VAD and variational (AR-Var) analyses developed at the National Severe Storms Laboratory for radar data quality control and assimilation is further improved in its two-step procedures: the reference check in the first step and the continuity check in the second step. In the first step, the alias-robust variational analysis is modified adaptively and used in place of the alias-robust velocity-azimuth display (VAD) analysis for all scan modes (rather than solely the WSR-88D volume coverage pattern 31 with the Nyquist velocityvNreduced below 12 m s−1and the TDWR Mod80 withvNreduced below 15 m s−1), so more raw data can pass the stringent threshold conditions used by the reference check in the first step. This improves the dealiased data coverage without false dealiasing to better satisfy the high data quality standard required by radar data assimilation. In the second step, new procedures are designed and added to the continuity check to increase the dealiased data coverage over storm-scale areas threatened by intense mesocyclones and their generated tornados. The performances of the improved dealiasing technique versus the existing techniques are exemplified by the results obtained for tornadic storms scanned by the operational KTLX radar in Oklahoma.

Highlights

  • Radar data quality control is critical for radar data assimilation, and dealiasing is an important and yet often very difficult part of radar data quality control

  • Further improvements are made in radar velocity dealiasing atop of the recently published VADbased dealiasing (Xu et al [10]) and alias-robust velocity-azimuth display (VAD) and variational (AR-Var)-based dealiasing (Xu and Nai [11])

  • Directly using the RAP-predicted wind field in the reference check can work well for almost all the 222 volumes of raw radial-velocity data collected by the KTLX radar for the three cases considered in this paper, but it causes false dealiasing on 10 tilts in two volumes at 23:14:34 UTC on May 19, 2013

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Radar data quality control is critical for radar data assimilation, and dealiasing is an important and yet often very difficult part of radar data quality control.

Results
Conclusion
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