Cell intensification following a boundary passage: 30 August 2013

From CSU-CHILL

Author: P. C. Kennedy

X-band reflectivity data collected as a fine line echo approached a small thunderstorm on 30 August 2013. Time lapse animations captured a brief intensification of the storm due to the enhanced low-level convergence along the fine line echo.


Introduction

During the late afternoon hours of 30 August 2013 the CSU-CHILL radar conducted 360 surveillance PPI volumes composed of two elevation angles: 0.75° and 1.25°. These volumes repeated every ~1.5 minutes, providing high time resolution observations of the interactions between several boundary layer echo features and some evolving showers to the east of the radar. The storm of interest was located approximately 30 km southeast of the radar as a fine line echo approached it from the north-northeast at 2329 UTC. The following plot shows the reflectivity data observed in the 1.25° elevation S-band data:

The radial velocity patterns indicated that localized convergence was present along the fine line echo. This is most evident along the Y=0 / 090° azimuth line where the sign of the radial velocities changes from positive (outbound) at ~27 km range to negative (inbound) at ~33 km range:


Attenuation-corrected reflectivity X-band loop

The radar was in dual frequency mode during this operation. Due to the narrow (0.3°) beamwidth, the X-band data provides a high spatial resolution view of the echo evolution. The following loop of attenuation-corrected X-band reflectivity data shows that several fine line echoes moved past the storm of interest. Reflectivity briefly maximized around 2333 UTC. This intensification was probably due to updraft strengthening in response to the increased low level convergence associated with the passing fine line echoes.


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Differential attenuation-corrected X-band loop

The next loop shows the attenuation-corrected data from the same PPI data sequence. Negatively-biased values appear downrange of the echo core during the brief period of maximum intensity. This differential attenuation pattern may be due to the presence of melting graupel with a water coating thickness that maximizes around the particle's equator and reduces random tumbling motions (Rasmussen and Heymsfield JAS 1987 p2754-2763.) The presence of such oblate melting ice particles would increase the attenuation of the H waves relative to that of the V waves, producing a negative "shadow".


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X-band differential propagation phase () loop

The largest differential propagation phase () shifts also coincided with the period of maximum echo intensity. The enhanced concentrations of oblate rain drops, probably augmented by the above-mentioned melting graupel particles, lead to the brief existence of total of total two-way phase shift accumulations approaching 100 deg.


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Specific differential propagation () loop

Maximum X-band one-way specific propagation differential phase () reached ~ 6 deg / km, implying peak rainfall rates of ~80 mm / hr.


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Summary

Convergence along low-level boundaries can be a significant factor in the initiation and intensification of showers and thunderstorms (Wilson and Schreiber, MWR 1986 p2516-2536). Based on high time resolution radar data, storm-boundary interactions can lead to appreciable variations in rain rate, etc. on time scales of 1 - 3 minutes.

References