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"Rowe, Angela K."
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THE OLYMPIC MOUNTAINS EXPERIMENT (OLYMPEX)
by
Schwaller, Mathew R.
,
Zagrodnik, Joseph P.
,
Tanelli, Simone
in
Cameras
,
Convection
,
Doppler radar
2017
The Olympic Mountains Experiment (OLYMPEX) took place during the 2015/16 fall–winter season in the vicinity of the mountainous Olympic Peninsula of Washington State. The goals of OLYMPEX were to provide physical and hydrologic ground validation for the U.S.–Japan Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) satellite mission and, more specifically, to study how precipitation in Pacific frontal systems is modified by passage over coastal mountains. Four transportable scanning dual-polarization Doppler radars of various wavelengths were installed. Surface stations were placed at various altitudes to measure precipitation rates, particle size distributions, and fall velocities. Autonomous recording cameras monitored and recorded snow accumulation. Four research aircraft supplied by NASA investigated precipitation processes and snow cover, and supplemental rawinsondes and dropsondes were deployed during precipitation events. Numerous Pacific frontal systems were sampled, including several reaching “atmospheric river” status, warm- and cold-frontal systems, and postfrontal convection.
Journal Article
Mechanisms of convective cloud organization by cold pools over tropical warm ocean during the AMIE/DYNAMO field campaign
by
Martini, Matus N.
,
Feng, Zhe
,
Hagos, Samson
in
Aggregation
,
AMIE/DYNAMO Field Campaign
,
Atmospheric precipitations
2015
This paper investigates the mechanisms of convective cloud organization by precipitation‐driven cold pools over the warm tropical Indian Ocean during the 2011 Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Madden‐Julian Oscillation (MJO) Investigation Experiment/Dynamics of the MJO (AMIE/DYNAMO) field campaign. A high‐resolution regional model simulation is performed using the Weather Research and Forecasting model during the transition from suppressed to active phases of the November 2011 MJO. The simulated cold pool lifetimes, spatial extent, and thermodynamic properties agree well with the radar and ship‐borne observations from the field campaign. The thermodynamic and dynamic structures of the outflow boundaries of isolated and intersecting cold pools in the simulation and the associated secondary cloud populations are examined. Intersecting cold pools last more than twice as long, are twice as large, 41% more intense (measured with buoyancy), and 62% deeper than isolated cold pools. Consequently, intersecting cold pools trigger 73% more convection than do isolated ones. This is due to stronger outflows that enhance secondary updraft velocities by up to 45%. However, cold pool‐triggered convective clouds grow into deep convection not because of the stronger secondary updrafts at cloud base, but rather due to closer spacing (aggregation) between clouds and larger cloud clusters that form along the cold pool boundaries when they intersect. The close spacing of large clouds moistens the local environment and reduces entrainment drying, increasing the probability that the clouds further develop into deep convection. Implications for the design of future convective parameterization with cold pool‐modulated entrainment rates are discussed. Key Points: Intersecting cold pools trigger more clouds than isolated ones Intersecting cold pools produce larger clouds and closer spacing among them Larger clouds and closer spacing promote deeper convection
Journal Article
Effects of Riming on Ice‐Phase Precipitation Growth and Transport Over an Orographic Barrier
by
DeLaFrance, Andrew
,
Rowe, Angela K.
,
McMurdie, Lynn A.
in
Air flow
,
cloud physics and chemistry
,
Cloud properties
2024
The evolution of ice‐phase particles within precipitating clouds depends on the environmental properties of the cloud and on physical characteristics of the particles themselves, which can be modified by airflow over steep terrain. Through employing a unique Lagrangian particle‐based precipitation model, this study investigates the sensitivities in ice‐phase particle growth and transport due to variabilities in riming processes over an orographic barrier. This analysis is applied to two wintertime stratiform cyclones sampled by in situ aircraft over windward slopes during the Olympic Mountains Experiment. For both events, we simulate the ice‐phase particle evolution and trajectory within a two‐dimensional prescribed state representative of median observed cloud properties. Sensitivity simulations were constructed based on observed variabilities in supercooled liquid water (SLW) properties and its vertical extent above the melting level. Perturbations of SLW concentration equivalent to the 85th and 15th percentiles of observed values, which typically amounted to a change of less than 0.05 g m−3, resulted in respective increases or decreases in the ice‐phase contribution to surface precipitation mass by as much as 50% and horizontal particle trajectories differences exceeding 10 km. Similar sensitivities were found in response to varying the vertical extent of SLW above the melting level and to adjustments in mean SLW droplet size. The significant precipitation response to small variations in cloud properties principally arises from changing rates of rime mass accumulation and correspondingly, increases in particle fall speed. Considerations for the numerical representation of the riming process and its complex effects on precipitation are discussed. Plain Language Summary Precipitating clouds produce rain and snow at varying rates depending on the properties of the cloud. At below freezing temperatures in clouds, it is common to have a mixed‐phase layer where ice crystals and liquid droplets, in a supercooled state, coexist. Collection of the supercooled liquid droplets on the ice crystals greatly affects the mass and fall speed of the ice crystals, thereby affecting where, and how much, precipitation reaches the surface. In this study, we use a numerical model to simulate the evolution of individual precipitating ice crystals and evaluate sensitivities to the concentration and distribution of supercooled liquid droplets in the cloud. Based on variabilities measured in clouds upstream of the Olympic Mountains, small changes in the concentration of supercooled liquid droplets, the size of the liquid droplets, or the depth of the mixed‐phase layer produces changes in rain rates of up to 50% and increases or decreases in the distance a particle travels by as much as 10 km. We discuss the implications of these significant sensitivities to the precipitation rate and fall characteristics. Key Points Particle‐based models provide frameworks for simulating the evolution and trajectory of precipitating particles in stratiform winter storms For sufficiently deep mixed‐phase clouds, small variations in supercooled liquid water mass may alter precipitation rates by as much as 50% Particle trajectory is significantly modulated by mixed‐phase layer depth through cumulative adjustments in fall velocity during riming
Journal Article
Diurnal Circulations and Rainfall in Taiwan during SoWMEX/TiMREX (2008)
by
Johnson, Richard H.
,
Rowe, Angela K.
,
Ruppert, James H.
in
Atmospherics
,
Budgets
,
Circulation
2013
The diurnal cycle of the local circulation, rainfall, and heat and moisture budgets is investigated in Taiwan's heavy rain (mei-yu) season using data from the 2008 Southwest Monsoon Experiment/Terrain-influenced Monsoon Rainfall Experiment (SoWMEX/TiMREX). Comparisons are made between an undisturbed (UNDIST; 22–29 May) and disturbed period (DIST; 31 May–4 June). Many aspects of the diurnal evolution in surface flows and rainfall were similar during both periods. At night and during early morning hours, the low-level southwesterly flow was deflected around Taiwan's main topographic barrier, the Central Mountain Range (CMR), with rainfall focused near areas of enhanced offshore confluence created by downslope and land-breeze flows. During the day, the flow switched to onshore and upslope, rainfall shifted inland, and deep convection developed along the coastal plains and windward slopes. Atmospheric budget analysis indicates a day-to-evening transition of convective structure from shallow to deep to stratiform. Evaporation associated with the evening/nighttime stratiform precipitation likely assisted the nocturnal katabatic flow. Though the flow impinging on Taiwan was blocked during both periods, a very moist troposphere and strengthened low-level oncoming flow during DIST resulted in more widespread and intense rainfall that was shifted to higher elevations, which resembled a more weakly blocked regime. Correspondingly, storm cores were tilted upslope during DIST, in contrast to the more erect storms characteristic of UNDIST. There were much more lofted precipitation-sized ice hydrometeors within storms during DIST, the upslope advection of which led to extensive stratiform rain regions overlying the CMR peaks, and the observed upslope shift in rainfall.
Journal Article
Ambient and intrinsic dependencies of evolving ice-phase particles within a decaying winter storm during IMPACTS
by
DeLaFrance, Andrew
,
Rowe, Angela K.
,
Heymsfield, Andrew J.
in
Aggregation
,
Aircraft
,
Analysis
2025
Mesoscale bands develop within winter cyclones as concentrated regions of locally enhanced radar reflectivity, often corresponding to intensified precipitation rates lasting several hours. Surface precipitation characteristics are governed by the microphysical properties of the ice-phase particles aloft, yet their unique microphysical evolutionary pathways and ambient environmental dependencies in banded regions remain poorly understood, in part due to a paucity of observations within clouds. Addressing this need, the Investigation of Microphysics and Precipitation for Atlantic Coast-Threatening Snowstorms measured properties of winter cyclones from airborne in situ and remote sensing platforms. Observations collected within a banded region of a decaying-stage northeast United States cyclone revealed a microphysical pathway characterized by precipitation fallout from a weak generating cell layer through an ∼ 2 km deep subsaturated downdraft region. Sublimation was a dominant evolutionary process, resulting in a > 70 % reduction in the initial characteristic ice water content (IWC). This vertical evolution was reproduced by a one-dimensional (1D) particle-based model simulation constrained by observations, conveying accuracy in the process representation. Four sensitivity simulations assessed evolutionary dependencies based on observationally informed perturbations of the ambient relative humidity, RH, and vertical air motion, w. Perturbations of ∼ 2 % RH significantly varied the resultant characteristic IWC loss, by as much as 29 %, whereas comparable perturbations of w had negligible effects. Intrinsic particle evolution during sublimation demonstrated a notable imprint on vertical profiles of radar reflectivity, but the Doppler velocity was more strongly governed by the ambient w profile. These findings contextualize radar-based discrimination of sublimation from other ice-phase processes, including riming and aggregation.
Journal Article
Influences of the South American Low-Level Jet on the Convective Environment in Central Argentina Using a Convection-Permitting Simulation
2024
This study documents the spatial and temporal distribution of the South American low-level jet (SALLJ) and quantifies its impact on the convective environment using a 6.5-month convection-permitting simulation during the Remote Sensing of Electrification, Lightning, And Mesoscale/Microscale Processes with Adaptive Ground Observations and Clouds, Aerosols, and Complex Terrain Interactions (RELAMPAGO-CACTI) campaigns. Overall, the simulation reproduces the observed SALLJ characteristics in central Argentina near the Sierras de Córdoba (SDC), a focal point for terrain-focused upscale growth. SALLJs most frequently occur in the summer with maxima to the northwest and east of the SDC and minima over the higher terrain. The shallower SALLJs (<1750 m) have a strong overnight skew, while the elevated jets are more equally spread throughout the day. SALLJ periods often have higher amounts of low-level moisture and instability compared to non-SALLJ periods, with these impacts increasing over time when the SALLJ is present and decreasing afterward. The SALLJ may enhance low-level wind shear magnitudes (particularly when accounting for the jet height); however, enhancement is somewhat limited due to the presence of speed shear in most situations. SALLJ periods are associated with low-level directional shear favorable for organized convection and an orientation of cloud-layer wind shear parallel to the terrain, which could favor upscale growth. A case study is shown in which the SALLJ influenced both the magnitude and direction of wind shear concurrent with convective upscale growth near the SDC. This study highlights the complex relationship between the SALLJ and its impacts during periods of widespread convection.
Journal Article
A storm safari in subtropical South America: Proyecto RELAMPAGO
by
Luna, Lorena Medina
,
Saulo, Andrea Celeste
,
Nesbitt, Stephen William
in
Climate change
,
Convection
,
Data collection
2021
This article provides an overview of the experimental design, execution, education and public outreach, data collection, and initial scientific results from the Remote Sensing of Electrification, Lightning, and Mesoscale/Microscale Processes with Adaptive Ground Observations (RELAMPAGO) field campaign. RELAMPAGO was a major field campaign conducted in the Córdoba and Mendoza provinces in Argentina and western Rio Grande do Sul State in Brazil in 2018–19 that involved more than 200 scientists and students from the United States, Argentina, and Brazil. This campaign was motivated by the physical processes and societal impacts of deep convection that frequently initiates in this region, often along the complex terrain of the Sierras de Córdoba and Andes, and often grows rapidly upscale into dangerous storms that impact society. Observed storms during the experiment produced copious hail, intense flash flooding, extreme lightning flash rates, and other unusual lightning phenomena, but few tornadoes. The five distinct scientific foci of RELAMPAGO—convection initiation, severe weather, upscale growth, hydrometeorology, and lightning and electrification—are described, as are the deployment strategies to observe physical processes relevant to these foci. The campaign’s international cooperation, forecasting efforts, and mission planning strategies enabled a successful data collection effort. In addition, the legacy of RELAMPAGO in South America, including extensive multinational education, public outreach, and social media data gathering associated with the campaign, is summarized.
Journal Article
Simulated particle evolution within a winter storm: contributions of riming to radar moments and precipitation fallout
by
DeLaFrance, Andrew
,
Rowe, Angela K.
,
Heymsfield, Andrew J.
in
Aggregation
,
Airborne radar
,
Airborne sensing
2024
Remote sensing radars from airborne and spaceborne platforms provide critical observations of clouds to estimate precipitation rates across the globe. The ability of these radars to detect changes in precipitation properties is advanced by Doppler measurements of particle fall speed. Within mixed-phase clouds, precipitation mass and its fall characteristics are especially sensitive to the effects of riming. In this study, we quantified these effects and investigated the distinction of riming from aggregation in Doppler radar vertical profiles using quasi-idealized particle-based model simulations. Observational constraints of a control simulation were determined from airborne in situ and remote sensing measurements collected during the Investigation of Microphysics and Precipitation for Atlantic Coast-Threatening Snowstorms (IMPACTS) for a wintry–mixed precipitation event over the northeastern United States on 4 February 2022. From the upper boundary of a one-dimensional column, particle evolution was simulated through vapor deposition, aggregation, and riming processes, producing realistic Doppler radar profiles. Despite a modest observed amount of supercooled liquid water (0.05 g m−3), riming accounted for 55 % of the ice-phase precipitation mass, cumulatively increasing reflectivity by 44 % and Doppler velocity by 68 %. Independent evaluation of process-based sensitivities showed that, while radar reflectivity is comparably sensitive to either riming- or aggregation-based particle morphology, the Doppler velocity profile is uniquely sensitive to particle density changes during riming. Thus, Doppler velocity profiles advance the diagnosis of riming as a dominant microphysical process in stratiform clouds from single-wavelength radars, which has implications for quantitative constraints of particle properties in remote sensing applications.
Journal Article
Orographic Controls on Extreme Precipitation Associated with a Mei-Yu Front
by
Rasmussen, Kristen L.
,
Cornejo, Ian C.
,
Rowe, Angela K.
in
Accumulation
,
Deformation
,
Duration
2024
Taiwan regularly receives extreme rainfall due to seasonal mei-yu fronts that are modified by Taiwan’s complex topography. One such case occurred between 1 and 3 June 2017 when a mei-yu front contributed to flooding and landslides from over 600 mm of rainfall in 12 h near the Taipei basin, and over 1500 mm of rainfall in 2 days near the Central Mountain Range (CMR). This mei-yu event is simulated using the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) Model with halved terrain as a sensitivity test to investigate the orographic mechanisms that modify the intensity, duration, and location of extreme rainfall. The reduction in WRF terrain height produced a decrease in rainfall duration and accumulation in northern Taiwan and a decrease in rainfall duration, intensity, and accumulation over the CMR. The reductions in northern Taiwan are linked to a weaker orographic barrier jet resulting from a lowered terrain height. The reductions in rainfall intensity and duration over the CMR are partially explained by a lack of orographic enhancements to mei-yu frontal convergence near the terrain. A prominent feature missing with the reduced terrain is a redirection of postfrontal westerly winds attributed to orographic deformation, i.e., the redirection of flow due to upstream topography. Orographically deforming winds converge with prefrontal flow to maintain the mei-yu front. In both regions, the decrease in mei-yu front propagation speed is linked to increased rainfall duration. These orographic features will be further explored using observations captured during the 2022 Prediction of Rainfall Extremes Campaign in the Pacific (PRECIP) field campaign.
Journal Article
Physical–chemical properties of particles in hailstones from central Argentina
by
Bernal Ayala, Anthony C.
,
Arena, Lucia E.
,
Nachlas, William O.
in
Aerosols
,
Agricultural land
,
Agriculture
2025
This study presents a novel analysis of two hailstones collected in central Argentina to provide insights into the size distribution, composition, and potential sources of non-soluble particles within hailstones. Using this new method, non-soluble particles are trapped beneath a thin layer of polyvinyl resin and analyzed with confocal laser and scanning electron microscopy combined with energy-dispersive spectroscopy, preserving their in situ location and physical characteristics. The study characterized these particles' distribution, shape, and size and identified their elemental composition, which is used to interpret possible source regions. Particles ranged in diameter from our detection limit from 1 to 256 µm, with the largest particles consistently found in the hailstone embryos. Agglomerated mineral and organic particles dominated the elemental composition in both the embryo and outer layers, with the largest agglomerated particle (256 µm) being an organic-rich particle in the embryo of the larger hailstone. The composition and size distribution varied between the two hailstones: one contained agglomerated salt particles (up to 150 µm) in its embryo, traced to a nearby salt lake, while the other contained copper chloride and zinc chloride particles (up to 78 µm) primarily in its outer layers, potentially associated with agrochemicals commonly used for pest control and fertilizer in Argentina. Various local and regional land-use types, including shrublands, mixed vegetation, croplands, and urban areas, were linked to specific types of particles. Therefore, this study highlights the regional influence of various land-use types on hail formation and growth, pointing to the potential impacts of natural and anthropogenic factors on hailstone composition and revealing how particle characteristics vary between the embryo and outer layers of hailstones.
Journal Article