McMurdie L A, Rowe A K, Houze R A, Brodzik S R, Zagrodnik J P, Schuldt T M
Department of Atmospheric Sciences University of Washington Seattle WA USA.
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory Richland WA.
J Geophys Res Atmos. 2018 Nov 16;123(21):12194-12209. doi: 10.1029/2018JD029161. Epub 2018 Nov 7.
Enhancement of precipitation processes aloft over complex terrain is documented using reflectivity data from an S-band scanning radar (NPOL) that was deployed on the west coast of Washington State during the Olympic Mountains Experiment (OLYMPEX). From November 2015 through mid-January 2016, NPOL obtained high-resolution data within sectors over the ocean and over the windward slopes of the Olympic Mountains. Contoured Frequency by Altitude Diagrams of radar reflectivity highlight a higher frequency of occurrence of larger reflectivities for all heights between 2 and 8 km over land compared to ocean, with the largest difference in the 4- to 6-km range indicating a robust signature of enhancement aloft over the windward slopes. This enhancement pattern is found to some degree under all environmental conditions considered but is especially pronounced during periods of high vapor transport, high melting level height, southwest low-level winds, and neutral stability. These conditions are generally associated with warm sectors of midlatitude cyclones and atmospheric rivers. Past studies have postulated that a secondary enhancement in reflectivity aloft was an intrinsic part of atmospheric river type systems. However, these results show that further significant enhancement of this signature occurs as deep moist-neutral, high water vapor content flow is lifted when it encounters a mountain range. Reflectivity data from the dual-precipitation radar aboard the Global Precipitation Measurement satellite also documents this reflectivity increase aloft over the Olympic Mountains compared to the adjacent ocean, showing the potential for Global Precipitation Measurement to provide reliable estimates of precipitation structure over remote mountainous regions.
利用部署在华盛顿州西海岸、用于奥林匹克山脉实验(OLYMPEX)的S波段扫描雷达(NPOL)的反射率数据,记录了复杂地形上空降水过程的增强情况。从2015年11月到2016年1月中旬,NPOL在海洋上空和奥林匹克山脉迎风坡上空的扇形区域内获取了高分辨率数据。雷达反射率的等高线高度频率图显示,与海洋相比,陆地上2至8公里所有高度上较大反射率出现的频率更高,在4至6公里范围内差异最大,表明迎风坡上空有明显的增强特征。在所有考虑的环境条件下,都在一定程度上发现了这种增强模式,但在高水汽输送、高融化层高度、西南低空风以及中性稳定期间尤为明显。这些条件通常与中纬度气旋的暖区和大气河流有关。过去的研究推测,高空反射率的二次增强是大气河流型系统的固有组成部分。然而,这些结果表明,当深厚的湿中性、高水汽含量气流遇到山脉时被抬升,这种特征会进一步显著增强。全球降水测量卫星上搭载的双降水雷达的反射率数据也记录了奥林匹克山脉上空与相邻海洋相比高空反射率的增加,显示了全球降水测量在提供偏远山区降水结构可靠估计方面的潜力。