Abstract

Radar measurements are inherently affected by various meteorological and non-meteorological factors that may lead to a degradation of their quality, and the unwanted effects are also transferred into composites, i.e., overlapping images from different radars. The paper was aimed at answering the research question whether we could create ‘cleaner’ radar composites without disturbing features, and if yes, how the operational practice could take advantage of the improved results. To achieve these goals, the qRad and qPrec software packages, based on the concept of quality indices, were used. The qRad package estimates the true quality of the C-band radar volume data using various quality indices and attempts to correct some of the adverse effects on the measurements. The qPrec package uses a probabilistic approach to estimate precipitation intensity, based on heterogeneous input data and quality-based outputs of the qRad software. The advantages of the qRad software are improved radar composites, which offer benefits, among others, for aviation meteorology. At the same time, the advantages of the qPrec software are manifested through improved quantitative precipitation estimation, which can be translated into hydrological modeling or climatological precipitation mapping. Beyond this, the developed software indirectly contributes to sustainability and environmental protection—for instance, by enabling fuel savings due to the more effective planning of flight routes or avoiding runway excursions due to information on the increased risk of aquaplaning.

Highlights

  • Meteorological radars are an important part of the everyday practice of weather and aviation professionals and have a direct impact on public welfare

  • The panel shows the composite of seven radars in the left column, first without the quality information, with the QI algorithm described within this paper, and a composite field of QI is presented

  • An attempt was made to present the philosophy and specific features of two software packages developed at the Radar Department of the Slovak Hydrometeorological Institute

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Summary

Introduction

Meteorological radars are an important part of the everyday practice of weather and aviation professionals and have a direct impact on public welfare. They provide valuable information on the hydrometeor-related atmospheric processes and cover various spatial and temporal scales: the movement of weather systems, genesis/evolution/decomposition of cloud systems, rainfall rates, form and phase of hydrometeors, etc. One of the most essential goals of radar meteorology is adjusting the inherently imprecise radar measurements to the spatially relatively sparse gauge-based information on rainfall [6]. With correctly chosen approaches to Sustainability 2021, 13, 5285.

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