THE EFFECT OF WIND SHEAR ON FALLING PRECIPITATION

  • Gunn R
  • Marshall J
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Abstract

Abstract Precipitation particles which fall from a source aloft through a wind shear are sorted as to size, the largest particles reaching the ground closest to the generating source, the smaller particles further from it. If precipitation is assumed to form continuously in cloud, with a fixed size distribution, this sorting affects significantly the size distributions to be observed below the cloud, and so the relationship between the precipitation rate R and the radar scattering-parameter Z (which is ?D6, where D is the diameter of a raindrop or the water drop to which a snowflake would melt, and the summation is over unit volume). As an approximation to a small isolated shower, a horizontal generating element has been taken, of linear extent 1.6 kilometers in the direction of the wind shear. The quantities R and Z tend to be less at the ground than in the generating region, the size distributions remaining the same except for upper and lower limits of size imposed by the sorting. Several values of R and Z in the generating region have been considered, all obeying Z = aRb. The Z/R data below the showers have been found to be widely scattered about a locus Z = a?Rb?, where a? > a and b?

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APA

Gunn, R. E. S., & Marshall, J. S. (1955). THE EFFECT OF WIND SHEAR ON FALLING PRECIPITATION. Journal of Meteorology, 12(4), 339–349. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0469(1955)012<0339:teowso>2.0.co;2

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