Melting and Evaporation of Hydrometeors in Precipitation from the Anvil Clouds of Deep Tropical Convection
- 1 April 1979
- journal article
- Published by American Meteorological Society in Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences
- Vol. 36 (4) , 669-679
- https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1979)036<0669:maeohi>2.0.co;2
Abstract
Five cases of horizontally uniform precipitation associated with anvil clouds were investigated using weather radar, rawinsonde, satellite and raindrop size data collected during the Global Atmospheric Research Program's Atlantic Tropical Experiment (GATE). The area of horizontally uniform precipitation was in each case characterized by rainfall rates of 1–10 mm h−1 in contrast to the 10–100 mm h−1 observed in convective cells. Concentrations of precipitation-sized ice particles above the melting layer and liquid water below the melting layer, together with observed particle spectra, suggest that aggregation occurs above the melting layer, and that riming occurs in sufficient amounts to produce graupel within the anvil cloud. All five cases exhibited distinct radar bright bands in the melting layer. Cooling rates associated with the melting in this 1 km thick layer near the base of the anvil cloud were 1-7 K h−1. These cooling rates were comparable to the 0.2–6 K h−1 cooling rates due to evaporat... Abstract Five cases of horizontally uniform precipitation associated with anvil clouds were investigated using weather radar, rawinsonde, satellite and raindrop size data collected during the Global Atmospheric Research Program's Atlantic Tropical Experiment (GATE). The area of horizontally uniform precipitation was in each case characterized by rainfall rates of 1–10 mm h−1 in contrast to the 10–100 mm h−1 observed in convective cells. Concentrations of precipitation-sized ice particles above the melting layer and liquid water below the melting layer, together with observed particle spectra, suggest that aggregation occurs above the melting layer, and that riming occurs in sufficient amounts to produce graupel within the anvil cloud. All five cases exhibited distinct radar bright bands in the melting layer. Cooling rates associated with the melting in this 1 km thick layer near the base of the anvil cloud were 1-7 K h−1. These cooling rates were comparable to the 0.2–6 K h−1 cooling rates due to evaporat...Keywords
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