Boundary layer clear-air radar echoes: origin of echoes and accuracy of derived winds

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Abstract

Radar reflectivity comparisons of clean-air echoes in Florida and Colorado were made at radar wavelengths of 3.5 and 10cm. These comparisons, when analyzed along with a theoretical backscattering model, indicate that the echoes result from both particulate and Bragg scattering with particulate scattering dominating in the well-mixed boundary layer. The return signal in this layer is highly horizontally polarized with differential reflectivity ZDR values of 5-10 dB. This asymmetry causes the backscattering cross section to be considerably larger than one for a spherical water droplet of equal mass. It is concluded that insects are primarily responsible for the clear-air echo in the mixed boundary layer. -from Authors

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APA

Wilson, J. W., Weckwerth, T. M., Vivekanandan, J., Wakimoto, R. M., & Russell, R. W. (1994). Boundary layer clear-air radar echoes: origin of echoes and accuracy of derived winds. Journal of Atmospheric & Oceanic Technology, 11(5), 1184–1206. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0426(1994)011<1184:BLCARE>2.0.CO;2

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