To understand the microphysical processes that impact diabatic heating and cloud lifetimes in convection, we need to characterize the spatial distribution of supercooled liquid water. To address this observational challenge, vertically pointing active sensors at the Darwin Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) site are used to classify cloud phase within a deep convective cloud in a shallow to deep convection transitional case. The cloud cannot be fully observed by a lidar due to signal attenuation. Thus we develop an objective method for identifying hydrometeor classes, including mixed-phase conditions, using k-means clustering on parameters that describe the shape of the Doppler spectra from vertically pointing Ka band cloud radar. This approach shows that multiple, overlapping mixed-phase layers exist within the cloud, rather than a single region of supercooled liquid, indicating complexity to how ice growth and diabatic heating occurs in the vertical structure of the cloud.
Revised: August 23, 2017 |
Published: July 28, 2017
Citation
Riihimaki L.D., J.M. Comstock, E. Luke, T.J. Thorsen, and Q. Fu. 2017.A case study of microphysical structures and hydrometeor phase in convection using radar Doppler spectra at Darwin, Australia.Geophysical Research Letters 44, no. 14:7519-7527.PNNL-SA-125513.doi:10.1002/2017GL074187