Impact of mass–size parameterizations of frozen hydrometeors on microphysical retrievals: Evaluation by matching radar to in situ observations from GCPEX and OLYMPEx

Ousmane O. Sy, Simone Tanelli, Stephen L. Durden, Andrew Heymsfield, Aaron Bansemer, Kwo Sen Kuo, Noppasin Niamsuwan, Robert M. Beauchamp, V. Chandrasekar, Manuel Vega, Michael P. Johnson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

This article illustrates how multifrequency radar observations can refine the mass–size parameterization of frozen hydrometeors in scattering models and improve the correlation between the radar observations and in situ measurements of microphysical properties of ice and snow. The data presented in this article were collected during the GPM Cold Season Precipitation Experiment (GCPEx) (2012) and Olympic Mountain Experiment (OLYMPEx) (2015) field campaigns, where the true mass–size relationship was not measured. Starting from size and shape distributions of ice particles measured in situ, scattering models are used to simulate an ensemble of reflectivity factors for various assumed mass–size parameterizations (MSP) of the power-law type. This ensemble is then collocated to airborne and ground-based radar observations, and the MSPs are refined by retaining only those that reproduce the radar observations to a prescribed level of accuracy. A versatile ‘‘retrieval dashboard’’ is built to jointly analyze the optimal MSPs and associated re-trievals. The analysis shows that the optimality of an MSP depends on the physical assumptions made in the scattering simulators. This work confirms also the existence of a relationship between parameters of the optimal MSPs. Through the MSP optimization, the retrievals of ice water content M and mean diameter Dm seem robust to the change in meteorological regime (between GCPEx and OLYMPEx); whereas the retrieval of the diameter spread Sm seems more campaign dependent.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)993-1012
Number of pages20
JournalJournal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology
Volume37
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 2020

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