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Radar Hydrometeorology Using a Vertically Pointing Radar : Volume 4, Issue 4 (30/11/-0001)

By Cluckie, I. D.

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Book Id: WPLBN0003980484
Format Type: PDF Article :
File Size: Pages 16
Reproduction Date: 2015

Title: Radar Hydrometeorology Using a Vertically Pointing Radar : Volume 4, Issue 4 (30/11/-0001)  
Author: Cluckie, I. D.
Volume: Vol. 4, Issue 4
Language: English
Subject: Science, Hydrology, Earth
Collections: Periodicals: Journal and Magazine Collection, Copernicus GmbH
Historic
Publication Date:
-0001
Publisher: Copernicus Gmbh, Göttingen, Germany
Member Page: Copernicus Publications

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Griffith, R. J., Cluckie, I. D., Lane, A., & Tilford, K. A. (-0001). Radar Hydrometeorology Using a Vertically Pointing Radar : Volume 4, Issue 4 (30/11/-0001). Retrieved from http://self.gutenberg.org/


Description
Description: Water and Environmental Managment Research Centre, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Bristol, Lunsford House, Cantocks Close, Bristol, BS8 1UP, UK. A Vertically Pointing Radar (VPR) has been commissioned and deployed at a number of sites in southern England, to investigate numerically spatial and temporal variations in the vertical reflectivity profile (Zvp); particularly those associated with the intersection by the radar beam of a melting layer – the bright band. Comparisons with data from other instrumentation, notably with the S-band research radar at Chilbolton, but also with disdrometer data and rainfall measurements from a number of sophisticated rain gauges, show that VPR scans of the atmosphere provide detailed and reliable quantitative measurements of the Zvp. Analysis of a three year archive of Zvp data for Manchester has shown a bright band to be present in over 80% of rainfall events, highlighting the extent of the problem of bright band errors in scanning weather radar data. The primary characteristics of the bright band such as the height and magnitude (in dBZ) of the top, bottom and peak are identified objectively from VPR Zvp data by an automatic bright band recognition algorithm. It is envisaged that this approach could form the basis of an objective, automatic real time correction procedure for scanning weather radars.

Keywords: Vertically Pointing Radar, weather radar, hydrometeorology, bright-band, melting-layer, vertical radar reflectivity



Summary
Radar hydrometeorology using a vertically pointing radar

 
 



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