Abstract
The authors discuss the origin of a unique footprint on the sea induced by storm winds and rainfall as seen by synthetic aperture radar (SAR) from space. Two hypotheses are presented to explain the origin of an apparent wind shadow downwind of a storm cell. The first suggests that the cool air pool from the storm acts as an obstacle to divert the low-level easterly ambient winds and leaves a "wind shadow' on its downwind side. This theory is discarded because of the excessive storm lifetime needed to cause the long downstream "shadow'. The second hypothesis invokes the cool outflows from two preexisting storm cells such that their boundaries intersect obliquely leaving a triangular wedge of weaker winds and radar cross section (ie, the shadow). A new precipitation cell is initiated at the point of intersection of the boundaries at the apex of the shadow, giving the illusion that this cell is the cause of the shadow. -from Authors
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Atlas, D., Iguchi, T., & Pierce, H. F. (1995). Storm-induced wind patterns on the sea from spaceborne synthetic aperture radar. Bulletin - American Meteorological Society, 76(9), 1585–1592. https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0477(1995)076<1585:SIWPOT>2.0.CO;2
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