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Raman Lidar Measurements during the International H2O Project. Part II: Case Studies

Authors :
Zhien Wang
R-F. Lin
Keith Evans
Igor Veselovskii
Belay Demoz
Syed Ismail
R. A. Ferrare
Geary K. Schwemmer
D. N. Whiteman
Andreas Behrendt
J. Wang
Bruce M. Gentry
Edward V. Browell
J. Comer
Volker Wulfmeyer
P. Di Girolamo
D. Sabatino
Source :
Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology. 23:170-183
Publication Year :
2006
Publisher :
American Meteorological Society, 2006.

Abstract

The NASA GSFC Scanning Raman Lidar (SRL) participated in the International H2O Project (IHOP) that occurred in May and June 2002 in the midwestern part of the United States. The SRL system configuration and methods of data analysis were described in Part I of this paper. In this second part, comparisons of SRL water vapor measurements and those of Lidar Atmospheric Sensing Experiment (LASE) airborne water vapor lidar and chilled-mirror radiosonde are performed. Two case studies are then presented: one for daytime and one for nighttime. The daytime case study is of a convectively driven boundary layer event and is used to characterize the daytime SRL water vapor random error characteristics. The nighttime case study is of a thunderstorm-generated cirrus cloud case that is studied in its meteorological context. Upper-tropospheric humidification due to precipitation from the cirrus cloud is quantified as is the cirrus cloud optical depth, extinction-to-backscatter ratio, ice water content, cirrus particle size, and both particle and volume depolarization ratios. A stability and back-trajectory analysis is performed to study the origin of wave activity in one of the cloud layers. These unprecedented cirrus cloud measurements are being used in a cirrus cloud modeling study.

Details

ISSN :
15200426 and 07390572
Volume :
23
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........aa32fca97a0124562f37f6a9de02815f
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1175/jtech1839.1