kevin knupp university of alabama in huntsville ihop_2002 spring science workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

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Mobile Integrated Profiling System (MIPS) Observations of Boundary Layer and Water Vapor Variations around Boundaries and Storms Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

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Mobile Integrated Profiling System (MIPS) Observations of Boundary Layer and Water Vapor Variations around Boundaries and Storms. Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03. MIPS - Mobile Integrated Profiling System. IR radiometer. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Mobile Integrated Profiling System (MIPS) Observations of Boundary Layer and Water

Vapor Variations around Boundaries and Storms

Kevin Knupp

University of Alabama in Huntsville

IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop

3/24/03-3/26/03

Page 2: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

MIPS - Mobile Integrated Profiling System

MicrowaveProfiling

Radiometer

Dopplersodar

915 MHz Doppler Profiler

Lidar ceilometer

Surfaceinstrumentatio

n

18 June 2002Deployment 3

IRradiometer

Page 3: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Analysis activities at UAH• Examination of the characteristics of all boundaries that

passed over the MIPS (Ph.D. student) - see poster• 15 June case study (M.S. student, this presentation)• Heat burst event on 20 June around 0200-0230 Z (Knupp)

– very dry air within the heat burst (T 35 °C, Td 0 °C)

– combination of multiple microbursts and vortices– Highly variable wind, peak gust to 33 m s-1, near encounter

with a vortex

• Examination of a boundary layer entrainment event on 19 June; observed at the end of the CI experiment

• Examination of the performance of the microwave profiling radiometer (entire research team)– focus on the BLE days

Page 4: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

15 June 2002 case summary

• 15 June 2002, 1900-2400 UTC

• Observations of a complicated, diffuse boundary with small thermodynamic contrast. Three deployments were made around this boundary.

• Continuous observations were acquired as the eastward-moving boundary intersected the inflow zone of an existing intense thunderstorm– the boundary assumed a much better definition– enhanced inflow into the storm (blowing dust) was

observed– a strong gust front and outflow occurred 30 min later

Page 5: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Data presentation - 15 June case• 915 MHz Profiler (z = 60 m, t = 30-60 s)

– Vh, W, SNR (Z and Cn2), Doppler spectra, Tv(z)

• 0.905 m lidar ceilometer– cloud base & precip. properties (extinction), aerosols

• Microwave Profiling Radiometer (to 10 km)– T(z), v(z), PW, ILW, cloud base T (t = 14 min)

• Surface instrumentation (1 Hz)– T, RH, p, wind, solar radiation

• S-Pol Z

• GOES-11 visible images

Page 6: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

GOES 11 overview

1934 2003

Good definition in cloud field

Page 7: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

2034 2103

Poor definition in cloud field

Page 8: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

22032134

Anvil moves over the boundary

Page 9: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

23342255

Intense storm with gust front over MIPS

Page 10: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

1 2 3

3 deployments (surface data)

T, Td

Windspeed

Winddirection

Solarradiation

Anvil overhead

boundary

Page 11: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Radiometer values of PW and ILW (note time breaks)

1 2 3mm

Systematic increaseSystematic decrease

Profile

Page 12: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Deployments 1 and 2

Dep 1: Primarily west of boundary

Dep 2: Boundary passage - wind direction change

Lack of thermodynamic contrast in both cases

More significant clouds during boundary passage at 2055 UTC

1 2

boundary

Page 13: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

+

MIPS

Deployment 1

Page 14: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

+MIPS

Deployment 2

Page 15: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Winds from one set of 3 beams, plotted every 5 min

Red arrows indicate boundary location

Page 16: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Deployment 1 Deployment 2915 MHz profiler

Updraft with bndy at 1910? (deployment 1)

Enhanced SNR during bndy passage near 2050

Appears to be a difference in CBL properties for 1 and 2 (all moments)

SNR

W

V

Page 17: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Ceilometer: Cu cloud base near 1.8-2.0 km, some variation in backscatter at low levels associated with boundary passage

clouds clouds

Cloud base decrease following boundary passage

1 2

Page 18: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Radiometer T, v profiles at 1933

1000

700

5001922 1921west east

west east

d

Page 19: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Deployment 3

Boundary passage near 2205 UTC? Oscillation? Intense vortex observed 2 km to the west.

Anvil passage overhead rapidly reduced surface heating. As a result, the CBL turbulence weakened.

Enhanced inflow into the approaching storm

Gust front passage at 2256 UTC. 2 mb pressure rise prior to arrival

T, Td

Wind speed

Wind direction

pressure

solarGust front

boundary?

Page 20: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

+MIPSMIPS

Page 21: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

+MIPS

Page 22: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

+MIPS

Page 23: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

+MIPS

Page 24: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03
Page 25: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Deployment 3

Reduction in CBL turbulence due to cessation of surface heating.

Updraft activity near 2240 UTC

Acceleration of flow into the storm

Gust front passage at 2256 UTC - max updraft > 10 m s-1 and peak gust to 28 m s-1

Page 26: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

T, v profiles at 2246: disappearance of the stable layer

2137 2220 (same location)

1000

700

500

Deeper layer of water vapor within the boundary zone; 35% increase in integrated vapor

Page 27: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Summary & future work• Subtle variations in ABL properties were measured across

the diffuse boundary.• A strong cap existed near 2 km AGL initially.• The cap eroded within the “sharpened” boundary zone near

an approaching storm. Low-level water vapor increased significantly within the boundary zone.

• The (main?) boundary appeared to contract as the storm approached, following a rapid reduction in solar heating. The storm intensified in the region where it intersected the boundary. What were the physical mechanisms?

• Future: comprehensive case study; combine sensors to retrieve more detailed T and v profiles.

Page 28: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

End

Information on MIPS, with a (future) link to IHOP analysis efforts is at the following site:

http://vortex.nsstc.uah.edu/mips

Page 29: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

915 MHz SNR - varied examples, 2/16/01

Page 30: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

Ceilometer backscatter: cloud structure, precipitation properties, BL structure

Page 31: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03
Page 32: Kevin Knupp University of Alabama in Huntsville IHOP_2002 Spring Science Workshop 3/24/03-3/26/03

MIPS measurements of a boundary (dry line) during IHOP