Abstract

Abstract A small subset of midlatitude, midwinter precipitation events affecting the central Sierra Nevada are analyzed. The examples given are representative of 60% of the storm types documented during the past 4 yr of the Sierra Cooperative Pilot Project (SCPP). The structure of thee frontal systems is consistent with those observed in the United States Pacific Northwest and the British Isles. Combining information from a vertically pointing microwave radiometer, conventional radar, satellite imagery, and detailed time cross sections of rawinsonde data, relationships are developed between these remote sensing devices and the onset of supercooled liquid water (SLW). For the storms described. the highest concentration of SLW occurs after passage of an upper jet with accompanying upper-level front or surface cold ana- and/or katafront. Thee frontal passages lead to decreasing cloud thickness, warming cloud tops, decreasing precipitation rate, and shallow embedded convection over the Sierra. Discontinuities...

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