Abstract
Data from an airborne vertically pointing millimeter-wave Doppler radar are used to study the cloud microphysical effect of glaciogenic seeding of cold-season orographic clouds. Fixed flight tracks were flown downstream of ground-based silver iodide (AgI) generators in the Medicine Bow Mountains of Wyoming. Composite data from seven flights, each with a no-seeding period followed by a seeding period, indicate that radar reflectivity was higher near the ground during the seeding periods. Several physical considerations argue in favor of the hypothesis that the increase in near-surface reflectivity is attributed to AgI seeding. While the increase in near-surface reflectivity and thus snowfall rate are statistically significant, caution is warranted in view of the large natural variability of weather conditions and the small size of the dataset. © 2010 American Meteorological Society.
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Geerts, B., Miao, Q., Yang, Y., Rasmussen, R., & Breed, D. (2010). An airborne profiling radar study of the impact of glaciogenic cloud seeding on snowfall from winter orographic clouds. Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences, 67(10), 3286–3302. https://doi.org/10.1175/2010JAS3496.1
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