Vertical motions forced by small-scale terrain and cloud microphysical response in extratropical precipitation systems

Airborne vertically profiling Doppler radar data and output from a similar to 1-km-grid-resolution numerical simulation are used to examine how relatively small-scale terrain ridges (similar to 10-25 km apart and similar to 0.5-1.0 km above the surrounding valleys) impact cross-mountain flow, cloud processes, and surface precipitation in deep stratiform precipitation systems. The radar data were collected along fixed flight tracks aligned with the wind, about 100 km long between the clouds: the Idaho Experiment (SNOWIE). Data from repeat flight legs are composited in order to suppress transient features and retain the effect of the underlying terrain. Simulations closely match observed series of terrain-driven deep gravity waves, although the simulated wave amplitude is slightly exaggerated. The deep waves produce pockets of super-cooled liquid water in the otherwise ice-dominated clouds (confirmed by flight-level observations and the model) and distort radar-derived hydrometeor trajectories. Snow particles aloft encounter several wave updrafts and downdrafts before reaching the ground. No significant wavelike modulation of radar reflectivity or model ice water content occurs. The model does indicate substantial localized precipitation enhancement (1.8-3.0 times higher than the mean) peaking just downwind of individual ridges, especially those ridges with the most intense wave updrafts, on account of shallow pockets of high liquid water content on the upwind side, leading to the growth of snow and graupel, falling out mostly downwind of the crest. Radar reflectivity values near the surface are complicated by snowmelt, but suggest a more modest enhancement downwind of individual ridges.

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Author Geerts, Bart
Grasmick, Coltin
Rauber, Robert M.
Zaremba, Troy J.
Xue, Lulin
Friedrich, Katja
Publisher UCAR/NCAR - Library
Publication Date 2023-03-01T00:00:00
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Topic Category geoscientificInformation
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Metadata Date 2023-08-18T18:41:44.954708
Metadata Record Identifier edu.ucar.opensky::articles:26116
Metadata Language eng; USA
Suggested Citation Geerts, Bart, Grasmick, Coltin, Rauber, Robert M., Zaremba, Troy J., Xue, Lulin, Friedrich, Katja. (2023). Vertical motions forced by small-scale terrain and cloud microphysical response in extratropical precipitation systems. UCAR/NCAR - Library. http://n2t.net/ark:/85065/d7m90djz. Accessed 27 June 2025.

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