ACTIVE AND PASSIVE MICROWAVE REMOTE-SENSING OF PRECIPITATING STORMS DURING CAPE .1. ADVANCED MICROWAVE PRECIPITATION RADIOMETER AND POLARIMETRIC RADAR MEASUREMENTS AND MODELS
J. Turk et al., ACTIVE AND PASSIVE MICROWAVE REMOTE-SENSING OF PRECIPITATING STORMS DURING CAPE .1. ADVANCED MICROWAVE PRECIPITATION RADIOMETER AND POLARIMETRIC RADAR MEASUREMENTS AND MODELS, Meteorology and atmospheric physics, 54(1-4), 1994, pp. 3-27
The Advanced Microwave Precipitation Radiometer (AMPR), an across-trac
k scanning, four-channel (10.7, 19.35, 37.1, 85.5 GHz) total-power rad
iometer system, was instrumented aboard a NASA ER-2 aircraft during th
e 1991 CaPE (Convection and Precipitation/Electrification) project in
central Florida. At a 20 km flight altitude, the AMPR provides fine-sc
ale microwave imagery of Earth surfaces and its atmosphere, and is wel
l-suited for diverse hydrological applications. During overflights of
precipitation, coincident ground-based radar measurements were taken w
ith the NCAR CP-2 dual-frequency, dual-polarization radar system. Afte
r remapping the radar data into a format compatible with the AMPR scan
ning geometry, the radar-derived profiles of rain, melting, and frozen
hydrometeors are compared against the AMPR equivalent blackbody brigh
tness temperature (T(B)) imagery. Microwave radiative transfer modelin
g procedures incorporating the radar-derived hydrometeor profiles were
used to simulate the multifrequency AMPR imagery over both land and o
cean background ER-2 flights. Within storm cores over land, columnar i
ce water paths up to 20 kg m-2 gradually depressed the 85 GHz T(B) as
low as 100 K. The presence of tall vertical reflectivity columns encom
passing > 20 kg m-2 columnar ice water path often produced 37 GHz T(B)
< 85 GHz T(B) directly over the core. Over ocean, the 10 GHz channel
provided the clearest correlation with the rainfall amounts, whereas t
he 19 GHz channel saturated near 260 K past 10-15 mm hr-1 rain rate as
determined by radar. Scattering by ice and melting ice at 37 GHz prod
uced T(B) ambiguities over both raining and clear-ocean regions. Sensi
tivity to the columnar mixed phase region via the intermediate frequen
cies (19 and 37 GHz) is demonstrated and explained with the radar-deri
ved T(B) modeling. By superimposing vertical profiles of cloud liquid
water (which this radar cannot measure) upon the radar-inferred hydrom
eteor structure, additional information on the location of the peak cl
oud water and its amount relative to the vertical ice structure can be
noted, along with a possible inference of the dominant ice particle s
ize within the upper storm core. These results suggest that as the res
olution of passive radiometric measurements approaches dimensions wher
e the antenna beams become increasingly filled by the cloud, precipita
tion retrieval via multifrequency T(B) input is well-suited to a verti
cal profiling-type algorithm. This is further examined in Part II of t
his manuscript, where the radar-derived vertical hydrometeor profiles
are used to test the applicability of a multispectral cloud model-base
d approach to passive microwave precipitation retrieval from space.