https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/571811
Title: | Assessment of a microphysical ensemble used to investigate the owles iop4 lake-effect storm | Authors: | GAUDET L.C SULIA K.J TSAI T.-C CHEN J.-P BLAIR J.P. JEN-PING CHEN |
Keywords: | Clouds; Lakes; Rain; Snow; Storms; Weather forecasting; Aircraft measurement; Cloud composition; Convective clouds; Intensive observing periods; Liquid water content; Microphysical process; Polarimetric radar observation; Weather research and forecasting models; Ice; atmospheric modeling; cloud microphysics; ensemble forecasting; in situ measurement; remote sensing; storm; Canada; Ontario [Canada] | Issue Date: | 2021 | Journal Volume: | 78 | Journal Issue: | 5 | Start page/Pages: | 1607-1628 | Source: | Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | Abstract: | Microphysical processes within mixed-phase convective clouds can have cascading impacts on cloud properties and resultant precipitation. This paper investigates the role of microphysics in the lake-effect storm (LES) observed during intensive observing period 4 of the Ontario Winter Lake-effect Systems field campaign.Amicrophysical ensemble is composed of 24 simulations that differ in the microphysics scheme used (e.g., Weather Research and Forecasting Model microphysics options or a choice of two bulk adaptive habit models) along with changes in the representation of aerosol and potential ice nuclei concentrations, ice nucleation parameterizations, rain and ice fall speeds, spectral indices, ice habit assumptions, and the number of moments used for modeling ice-phase hydrometeors in each adaptive habit model. Each of these changes to microphysics resulted in varied precipitation types at the surface; 15 members forecast a mixture of snow, ice, and graupel, 7 members forecast only snow and ice, and the remaining 2 members forecast a combination of snow, ice, graupel, and rain. Observations from an optical disdrometer positioned to the south of the LES core indicate that 92% of the observed particles were snow and ice, 5% were graupel, and 3% were rain and drizzle. Analysis of observations spanning more than a point location, such as polarimetric radar observations and aircraft measurements of liquid water content, provides insight into cloud composition and processes leading to the differences at the surface. Ensemble spread is controlled by hydrometeor type differences spurred by processes or parameters (e.g., ice fall speed) that affect graupel mass. ? 2021 American Meteorological Society. |
URI: | https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85105309713&doi=10.1175%2fJAS-D-20-0045.1&partnerID=40&md5=0d86396d19ba086c0506484cad8d45fc https://scholars.lib.ntu.edu.tw/handle/123456789/571811 |
ISSN: | 224928 | DOI: | 10.1175/JAS-D-20-0045.1 |
Appears in Collections: | 大氣科學系 |
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