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RFC/HPC Hydromet Course 02-1: Precipitation Type Rain/Snow Lines John Cortinas, Jr., Ph.D. [email protected] University of Oklahoma-NOAA Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Forecasting Precipitation Type QPF: A forecast of the location and the liquid equivalent amount of precipitation during a given period. Since the phase of the precipitation affects the amount of liquid water that reaches the ground, these forecasts must consider precipitation type during the cold season. COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Forecasting Rain/Snow Lines and Other Precipitation Types * Have snowflakes formed aloft? * Will the snowflakes melt before reaching the ground? * Will the snowflakes sublimate before reaching the ground? * Are the snowflakes going to melt totally or partially? * Will frozen precipitation fall through layers of supercooled water? COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Outline * Brief review of precipitation microphysics associated with producing: Snow (ice) Freezing rain (supercooled droplets) Ice pellets * Review forecasting techniques for forecasting precipitation type. * Explain representation of precipitation in numerical models. * Introduce SPC products that may be helpful in forecasting precipitation type. COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Factors that Determine Precipitation Type at the Ground * Ground temperature (melting at the ground?) * Precipitation microphysics (snowflake/ice crystal characteristics) * Thermodynamic stratification (temperature and moisture vertical profiles) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Why is an understanding of precipitation microphysics important for QPFs? * Precipitation microphysics determine precipitation type! * This knowledge reduces forecaster reliance on “rules of thumb” that may be inaccurate. * Anticipate short-term changes in precipitation type and intensity. * Understand shortcomings of precipitation-type numerical guidance. * Knowledge of precipitation microphysics helps forecasters interpret numerical model guidance intelligently (apply adjustments to model forecast). COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Ice Physics - Basic Concepts * ice nuclei - microscopic particles that serve as nuclei for ice crystal formation * ice (snow) crystal - a small ice particle that results from deposition of water vapor onto an ice nucleus * snow crystal habit - the shape of an ice crystal * snowflake - an aggregate of ice crystals * snowflake ice density - ice density of snowflake (bulk ice = 0.9 g/cm3) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Ice Nucleation * Homogeneous nucleation - the spontaneous initiation of an ice crystal caused by random collisions of water vapor theoretically occurs when temperature is less than -40˚C and RH is several hundred percent! * Heterogeneous nucleation - the spontaneous formation of ice upon ice nuclei requires slightly supersaturated (with respect to ice) conditions and temperatures less than 0˚C, usually less than -10˚C Three modes of nucleation: » Contact » Deposition » Freezing COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Ice Nuclei Most ice nuclei are clay particles that originate in desert and arid regions. The concentration of active ice nuclei is temperature dependent. A very small concentration of active freezing nuclei can exist in air with a temperature as high as -5˚C (compared to ~1 X 108 L-1 for cloud condensation nuclei.) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Heterogeneous Nucleation How does an ice crystal form? * Contact mode: ice nuclei initiates the ice phase at the moment of contact with a supercooled droplet (riming) * Deposition mode: water vapor diffuses directly to ice nuclei * Freezing mode: ice phase is initiated from within a supercooled water droplet because of the presence of ice nuclei within the droplet COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Snow Crystal Habits bullet simple plate solid column combination of needles dendrite hollow column crystal with broad branches combination of bullets sheath (Pruppacher and Klett, p. 33) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Snow Crystal Habits Habit is a function of temperature and humidity. (Puppacher and Klett, p 32) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Ice Particle Multiplication Processes * In the presence of air saturated with respect to ice, ice multiplication processes increase the number of ice crystals and ultimately create more or larger snowflakes. * Two processes create additional ice nuclei from a single ice crystal: mechanical fracturing ice splintering fragmentation of individual cloud drops during freezing (controversial) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Mechanical Fracturing Occurs when fragile ice crystals, such as dendrites and other plates, collide with other crystals, graupel particles, or cloud drops. The process requires turbulence or differential crystal fall speeds. COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Ice Splintering * Occurs during riming conditions * Splintering is caused by collisions with relatively large cloud droplets * Depends on drop size distribution, supercooled water content, velocity of the drops impacting the riming particle * Pronounced maximum occurs at a temperature of -5 ˚C and drop impact velocity of 2.5 m/s COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Snowflakes Snowflakes are an aggregation of ice (snow) crystals. Avg. diameter of component crystals: (1) < 1.5 mm, (2) 1.5 to 2.5 mm, (3) 2.5 to 3.5 mm, (4) > 3.5 mm (Rodgers 1974) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Crystal Growth by Vapor Diffusion COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Growth Rate Growth rate depends on temperature (T), pressure (p), and size (r) of ice crystal P=constant (Ryan et al. 1976) Plot shows growth rate dependence on size and temperature COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Growth Rate Growth rate is temperature and pressure dependent. (Rogers, p. 126) Plot shows growth rate dependence on pressure and temperature COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Crystal Growth Among Supercooled Water Droplets Ice crystals grow at the expense of supercooled water droplets because the saturation vapor pressure is lower over ice than it is over liquid water. © Wadsworth Publishing Company 1998 COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Saturation Vapor Pressure Excess Saturation Vapor Pressure 0.3 0.25 0.2 Water - Ice (mb) Difference between saturation vapor pressure over water and over ice is greatest near -12˚C. 0.15 0.1 0.05 0 -40 -35 -30 -25 -20 -15 -10 -5 T (ÞC) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 0 Aggregation Aggregation increases the mass of a snowflake and is a function of temperature, maximizing near 0˚C because of sticky dendrites. Aggregates are composed mostly of dendrites and some thick plates. Secondary maximum occurs near -12˚C, the temperature at which the growth rate for dendrites is largest. (Rogers 1974) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Ice Crystal Decay dM 4rD( r ) dt sublimation - air cools deposition - air warms evaporation - air cools condensation - air warms melting - air cools freezing - air warms conduction - air cools or warms COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Sublimation * Occurs when ice crystals or snowflakes fall through icesubsaturated environments theoretical observed (1) 0.3 g/cm3 (2) 0.5 g/cm3 (3) 0.75 g/cm3 (4) 0.9 g/cm3 (A) column, 800X164 mm (B) sphere, r=160 mm SLE Radiosonde Air craft Comparison between survival distance of cirrus ice particles (Hall and Pruppacher 1977) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Snowflake Melting * The melting rate is a function of: air temperature near the hydrometeor surface relative humidity size of hydrometeor amount of liquid water present * Temperature of air near snowflake surface is determined primarily by latent heating and conduction. * Begins when temperature at surface of snowflake is > 0˚C stage 1: small drops of tens of microns in diameter appear at the tips of crystal branches stage 2: capillary forces and surface tension draws liquid water to center stage 3: small branches of interior melt stage 4: main ice frame collapses, pulls itself together into drop COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Melting Model RH = 90% Theoretical and observational studies show snowflakes can descend 800 m below the melting level before complete melting in a subsaturated layer. air temperature (I) Cooling from sublimation exceeds warming from conduction, therefore snowflake temperature remains at freezing and no melting occurs. (II) Warming from conduction exceeds cooling from sublimation and snowflakes begin to melt. Melting rate is slow because of additional cooling from evaporation. (III) Air is supersaturated with respect to ice and deposition occurs. Heating from conduction and deposition exceed the cooling from evaporation, and the snowflake melts completely. Vapor density Dewpoint temperature (Matsuo and Sasyo 1981) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Melting Experiments (Numerical) density = 0.005 g/cm3 density = 0.02 g/cm3 RH = 100%, no sublimation, some evap. density = 0.04 g/cm3 RH = 90% RH = 80% (Matsuo and Sasyo 1981) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Melting Experiment (Laboratory) (Mitra et. al 1990) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Dependence of Melting on Air Temperature and Relative Humidity (Matsuo and Sasyo 1981) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Cooling by Melting * the latent heat used to melt precipitation cools the atmosphere * significant and continuous melting can cool an entire vertical column below freezing, causing the melting level to descend to the surface (Stewart and McFarquhar 1987) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Forecasting Rain/Snow Lines * Examine forecast soundings when possible: wet-bulb profile melting level amount of precipitation expected general type and size of snowflakes presence of adiabatic cooling caused by upward motion ground temperature surface air temperature and relative humidity * Given the existence of ice crystals, snow usually occurs when: the wet-bulb temperature throughout the entire troposphere is expected to be equal to or less than 0 ˚C and the melting layer is within 0-800 m of the ground » high melting levels require low humidity (< 70%) surface layers or large snowflakes for snow to reach the surface » melting level can descend to surface with significant precipitation (in the absence of other thermal processes) : accum. Rain (in.) = [dT (˚C)*dP (mb)]/500 (Kain and Goss 2000), e.g. (2 * 200)/500 = 0.8” COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Partial Thickness * Thickness dz=-(R/g p) [Tv dp] 500 mb * Advantages: only requires 4 data values more accurate than 1000-500 thickness easy to compute some skill with rain/snow decisions * Disadvantages: does not identify shallow warm layers does not work for high terrain most accurate when “tuned” for specific regions (no national uses) 700 mb 850 mb 1000 mb } } } dz=-(R/g p) [Tv dp] Heppner (1992) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Partial Thickness (Heppner 1992) * Determine the thermal profile of the troposphere and its static stability. * Examine the 850-700-mb thickness. (thickness > 1550 m, snow unlikely). * Use care when evaluating 1000-500-mb thickness (snow can occur with thickness < 5400 m). * Always consider effect of diabatic processes (evaporation or melting) on changing thermal profile. * At 850 mb, 0 deg C isotherm doesn’t always work well to delineate rain and snow, especially with unstable lapse rates. COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Freezing Rain * Freezing rain occurs when snowflakes melt completely in an elevated warm layer and continue to fall into subfreezing surface layer with a temperature greater than -5 ˚C * The lack of ice nuclei at -5 ˚C inhibits the liquid water droplets from freezing in the cold surface layer (become supercooled) S FZRA 3 mm Maximum Diameter * Contact of supercooled droplets with subfreezing surface causes nearly instant freezing upon the cold surface (Stewart and King 1987) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Sounding Analysis (Freezing Rain) Depth of Warm Layer Height of Maximum Temperature Depth of Cold Layer Tw COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Sounding Analysis (Freezing Rain) Reports of FZRA at 00 and/or 12 UTC (1976-1990) * Albany, New York - 18 * Bufffalo, New York - 16 * Greensboro, North Carolina - 18 * Peoria, Illinois - 10 * Spokane, Washington - 6 COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Warm Layer Depth (Tw) 3000 Depth (m) 2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 ALB BUF GEG GSO PIA COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 All 12/3/01 Rawinsonde Data * Data distributions at most stations are similar * Median values: Depth of warm layer = 1500 m Depth of cold layer = 500 m Height of maximum temperature = 1500 m Maximum inversion temperature = 4˚C “Warm” area of sounding = 2000 deg - m “Cold” area of sounding = 125 deg - m * Some variability exists between stations and events * Important: Examine all sounding data to determine freezing rain potential COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Ice Pellets * ice pellets form when: snowflakes melt partially in an elevated warm layer and fall into a subfreezing surface layer fully-melted particles fall into a deep (.5 - 1 km), cold (T < -10 ˚C) surface layer. * surface layer must be sufficiently cold (T < -10˚C) and deep enough to activate ice nuclei and cause liquid drop to freeze as it descends to the ground 3 mm Maximum Diameter (Stewart 1987) COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 November 8, 2000 12 UTC COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Microphysics Summary * The amount of snowflake melting, and corresponding cooling, is dependent upon air temperature, relative humidity, snowflake size and density. * Numerical and laboratory experiments show that complete melting occurs between 0 and 800 m below the melting level in saturated or unsaturated conditions. * Rain/snow lines can exist on the warm side of the 0˚C isotherm when the RH is less than 100% and the melting level is within several hundred meters of the ground. * Freezing rain conditions include a elevated deep warm layer and a subfreezing surface layer that is usually no colder than ~ -5 ˚C. * Ice pellets conditions include a elevated, shallow warm layer and a cold (T < -5 ˚C) deep surface layer. COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Precipitation Type Forecasts Using Numerical Model Data * MOS * Bulk microphysics scheme in numerical models Precipitation type through AWIPS browser (maybe) and NTRANS * Experimental precipitation type algorithms <www.spc.noaa.gov/exper/ptax> COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 MOS * Precipitation-type determined by relationship between model variables and observed precip. type * Advantages: Automated system 3 hour output available Provides initial guess * Disadvantages: Equations must be derived for each location Only available every three hours Accuracy uncertain IAD E NGM MOS GUIDANCE 1/01/98 0000 UTC DAY /JAN 1 /JAN 2 HOUR 06 09 12 15 18 21 00 03 06 09 12 15 MX/MN 37 22 TEMP 19 17 16 26 33 37 32 30 27 26 25 36 DEWPT 6 6 7 10 11 12 14 14 14 14 16 22 CLDS SC SCSCSCSC SCCLCLCLCLSCCL WDIR 30 29 24 24 21 21 24 22 23 22 23 22 WSPD 08 06 04 08 10 11 12 13 13 12 09 11 POP06 0 0 1 0 0 POP12 1 0 QPF 0/ 0/ 0/0 0/ 0/0 0/ 0/0 0/ 0/0 PTYPE S S S S S S S S S R Z Z POZP 0 0 5 4 3 13 21 19 17 12 38 25 POSN 89 97 95 96 97 87 64 55 42 21 0 0 COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 ETA: Cloud/Precipitation Prediction Water Vapor Condensation of Clouds Evaporation of Clouds Clouds Liquid Water Ice Particles Aggregation Autoconversion Accretion Autoconversion Rain Snow Melting Evaporation/Sublimation of Precipitation COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Experimental Algorithms * Precipitation-type algorithms evaluate the entire thermodynamic profile to determine the most probable type of precipitation based upon precipitation microphysics. * Algorithm currently run with ETA data does not use cloud and precipitation data. * Algorithm used with RUC data uses cloud and precipitation data, as well as thermodynamic data. * Current algorithms are superior to thickness rules since they use all thermodynamic data and they incorporate physical processes. COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Precipitation Type Algorithms COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 SPC Mesoscale Discussion WINTER WEATHER MESOSCALE DISCUSSIONS GOAL IS TO PROVIDE SHORT-TERM (0-6 HOUR) GUIDANCE ON HAZARDOUS WINTER WEATHER FOR LOCAL NWS OFFICES AND OTHER USERS BOTH BEFORE AND DURING THE EVENT - ISSUED FOR BLIZZARDS, HEAVY SNOW AND FREEZING RAIN - FIRST PARAGRAPH PROVIDES THEWHAT, WHEN AND - SECOND PARAGRAPH PROVIDES THE MESOSCALE REASONING (THE WHY) OF THE FORECAST COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 Previous Mesoscale Discussion SAMPLE WINTER WEATHER MESOSCALE DISCUSSION ZCZC MKCSWOMCD ALL;3 45,0 867 385,0773 365 ,077 3 32 5,0 867; ACUS3 KMKC 24 0455 MKC MCD 2404 55 NCZ000 -SCZ000-TNZ000-2 4080 0SPC MESOSCALE DISCUSSION #112 4 FOR WRN NC...ERN TN...AND NWRN SC CONCERNING...FREEZING RAIN... AREAS OF LIGHT FREEZING RAIN/DRIZZLE ARE EXPECTED ACROSS PARTS OF WRN NC AND NWRN SC. LIGHT TO MODERATE TO CONTINUE RAIN IS LIKELY OVER PARTS OF ERN TN. ICE FREEZING EXPECTED TO VARY BETWEEN 0 .10 AND 0.5 0 AN INCH ACCUMULATIONS ARE THROUGH 2 4/08 Z. 24 /00Z RUC2 AND ETA MODEL FORECAST SOLUTIONS S UGGEST AN AREA OF ENHANCED VERTICAL MOTION ACROSS NRN AL/SRN MIDDLE TN WILL MOVE ENEWD ACROSS ERN TN INTO WRN NC. L ATEST IR SATELLITE IMAGERY INDICATES COOLING CLOUD TOPS NEAR TCL TO HSV. ALTHOUGH BOTH MODEL S SUGGEST A WEL L FOCUSED AREA OF UVV OVER ERN TN... SATELLITE/RADAR AND SOUNDING DATA SEEM TO INDICATE A GENERAL AREA OF UVV FROM NRN AL INTO SRN/SERN VA. EXPECT AREAS OF L IGHT TO BRIEFL Y MODERATE FREEZING RAIN WILL GRADUALLY MOVE ENEWD AS UPPER LEVEL DIVERGENCE MOVES ACROSS ERN TN AND WRN NC. FSL /AIRCRAFT SOUNDING DATA CONTINUES TO INDICATE THERMODYNAMIC PROFIL ES REMAIN FAVORABL E FOR PRECIPITATION. FREEZING/MIXED ..VAN SPEYBROECK.. 12 /24/98 ...PLEASE SEE WWW.SPC.NOAA.GOV FOR GRAPHIC NNNN PRODUCT... COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 References * Baldwin, M., R. Treadon, and S. Contorno, 1994: Precipitation type prediction using a decision tree approach with NMCs mesoscale eta model. Preprints, 10th Conf. on Numerical Weather Prediction, Portland, OR, AMS, 30-31. * Czys, R., et al., 1996: A physically based, nondimensional parameter for discriminating between locations of freezing rain and ice pellets. Wea. Forecasting, 11, 591-598. * Erickson, M., 1995: Evaluation NWS precipitation type forecasts. Preprints, Sixth Conf. On Aviation Weather Systems, AMS, Dallas, TX, 219-224. * Hall, W.D., H.R. Pruppacher, 1976: The survival of ice particles falling from cirrus clouds in subsaturated air. J. Atmos. Sci., 33, 1995–2006. * Heppner, P., 1992: Snow versus rain: Looking beyond the “magic” numbers. Wea. Forecasting, 7, 683-691. * Keeter, K. and J. Cline, 1991: The objective use of observed and forecast thickness values to predict precipitation type in North Carolina, Wea Forecasting, 6, 456-469. COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01 References * Matsuo, T., and Y. Sasyo, 1981: Melting of snowflakes below the freezing level in the atmosphere. J. Met. Soc. Japan, 59, 10-25. * Nakaya, U., 1954: Snow crystals. Harvard Univ. Press, 521 pp. * Pruppacher H., and J. Klett, 1980: Microphysics of clouds and precipitation. D. Reidel, 714 pp. * Roger, R., 1979: A short course in cloud physics. Pergamon Press, New York, 235 pp. * Stewart, R., and P. King, 1987: Freezing precipitation in winter storms. Mon. Wea. Rev., 115, 1270-1279. * Stewart, R., and G. McFarquhar, 1987: On the width and motion of the rain/snow boundary. Water Res. Res., 23, 343-350. * Zerr, R., 1997: Freezing rain: An observational and theoretical study. Wea. Forecasting, 36, 1647-1661. * Zhao, Q., T. Black, and M. Baldwin, 1997: Implementation of the cloud prediction scheme in the Eta model at NCEP. Wea. Forecasting, 12, 697-712. COMET RFC/HPC Hydrometeorology Course 02-1 12/3/01