Severe Convective Storms

A special issue of Atmosphere (ISSN 2073-4433). This special issue belongs to the section "Meteorology".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 December 2017) | Viewed by 4022

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
University of Alberta, Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Edmonton, Canada
Interests: convective storms; hail; tornadic storms; flash floods; convective clouds; modelling clouds and storms

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

For this Special Issue on “Severe Convective Storms”, manuscripts are requested that report on original research dealing with severe local storms, modelling of storms, hail, tornadoes, destructive winds, lightning storms, supercells, nowcasting storms, weather radar, model evsluation, disseminstion of storm warnings, and the impacts of convective storms.

Prof. Gerhard Reuter
Guest Editor

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

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Article
Deployment and Performance of an X-Band Dual-Polarization Radar during the Southern China Monsoon Rainfall Experiment
by Zhao Shi, Haonan Chen, Venkatachalam Chandrasekar and Jianxin He
Atmosphere 2018, 9(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos9010004 - 26 Dec 2017
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 3702
Abstract
An X-band dual-polarization radar (XPRAD) was deployed in Guangdong province as part of the Southern China Monsoon Rainfall Experiment (SCMREX) during the storm season in 2016. This paper presents a comprehensive assessment of XPRAD observations during SCMREX with emphasis on data processing and [...] Read more.
An X-band dual-polarization radar (XPRAD) was deployed in Guangdong province as part of the Southern China Monsoon Rainfall Experiment (SCMREX) during the storm season in 2016. This paper presents a comprehensive assessment of XPRAD observations during SCMREX with emphasis on data processing and rainfall products. The differential phase-based attenuation correction and radar calibration using self-consistency of dual-polarization observables are presented. It is found that the standard deviation of the Z d r bias is less than 0.2 dB based on ‘light rain at low angle’ and ‘dry aggregate snow’ observations. Cross-comparison with two standard S-band China New Generation Weather Radars (CINRAD) shows that the bias of Z h has a mean value less than 1.5 dBZ and a standard deviation less than 0.5 dBZ. In addition, fifteen rainfall events that occurred during the intensive observing period (IOP) are analyzed to demonstrate the rainfall estimation performance of XPRAD. In particular, rainfall accumulations at 1-, 2- and 3-h scales derived using R( K d p ) and R( Z h , Z d r ) relations are evaluated using national level rain gauge data and CINRAD-based rainfall estimation. The results show that both R( K d p )- and R( Z h , Z d r )-based products agree well with the rain gauge observations and CINRAD estimation. The difference between R ( K d p ) and R ( Z h , Z d r ) is not significant, although R ( K d p ) shows slightly better performance than R ( Z h , Z d r ) . Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Severe Convective Storms)
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