Gd. Nastrom et al., CASE-STUDIES OF THE VERTICAL VELOCITY SEEN BY THE FLATLAND RADAR COMPARED WITH INDIRECTLY COMPUTED VALUES, Journal of atmospheric and oceanic technology, 11(1), 1994, pp. 14-21
The hypothesis that temporal averages of vertical motions over a singl
e radar station are representative of weather systems large enough to
be resolved by the radiosonde network is tested using data from the Fl
atland VHF radar, located in the very flat terrain of central Illinois
. Six-hourly means of radar data were compared with four separate esti
mates of the synoptic or subsynoptic-scale vertical motions computed u
sing the dynamical equations with unsmoothed rawinsonde data and with
NMC gridded analyses. Spring and fall cases of large upward and downwa
rd vertical motions were selected for study. During the course of this
study it was found that contamination of the Doppler radar spectra by
heavy or moderate precipitation must be taken into account during ana
lyses of VHF radar data in the troposphere. The signs of the vertical-
motion estimates from the indirect schemes in the extreme cases select
ed for study here nearly always agree, although the magnitudes often d
iffer by a factor up to about 4. The adiabatic method was found to be
unrepresentative due to the large time separation of radiosonde measur
ements. The 6-h average radar observations usually fall within the env
elope of estimates from the various indirect methods. The major source
of statistical uncertainty of the temporal means of the vertical moti
ons seen by the radar is the mesoscale structure seen in shorter-perio
d averages and not completely filtered out during averaging. Such stru
cture is not resolved by the radiosonde network data and analyses.