Abstract

In winter weather situations, the accretion of supercooled liquid water (SLW) droplets onto aircraft results in icing. The problem of icing detection is that of identification of SLW. Direct remote sensing of SLW is almost impossible using conventional S-, C-, X- and K-band radars because of the negligible backscatter cross section of cloud droplets. Microwave radiometers can remotely estimate the path-integrated SLW, but cannot themselves provide spatial distribution. The differential attenuation parameter, whose direct measurement is available via the dual-frequency radar technique (X- and K-band) may be able to provide the spatial distribution of SLW. The dual-frequency technique is susceptible to problems which are due to non-Rayleigh scattering at the shorter of the two wavelengths. Particularly in the presence of aggregates and gradients in snowfall rate along the radar beam, the dual-frequency technique might yield false SLW concentrations because of non-Rayleigh scattering. However, regions of considerable SLW concentrations may not co-exist with aggregates. Thus, by carefully avoiding the non-Rayleigh scattering regions, a better estimate of the differential attenuation can be obtained. Also, dual-frequency ratio and X-band reflectivity observations can be used to estimate the snowfall rate. Radar model computations at X- and K-band are presented. Precipitation media comprising of snow and SLW are considered. Primarily the Rayleigh-Gans scattering method is used to investigate scattering and attenuation. Modeling results are analyzed to improve radar retrieval and snowfall rate. >

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