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Classification of Rain Clouds Based on the Relationship between Microwave Emission and Scattering SignalsUnknown Date (has links)
In this thesis, we introduce a new approach to classify rain clouds based on the relationship between the emission signal and scattering signal derived from microwave brightness temperature data. Two parameters are used as indicators of emission signal and scattering signal respectively: one is the polarization difference (D) at 19 GHz, and the other one is the polarization-corrected temperature (PCT) at high-frequencies channels. D is related to the emission of liquid hydrometeors, and PCT mainly reflects the brightness temperature depression due to the scattering by ice particles. Both D and PCT decrease with increasing precipitation rate. Therefore, certain combinations of D and PCT can be regarded as the representatives of cloud hydrometeor structures. Based on the D-PCT relationship investigated in this study, we classified the observed rain clouds into five categories—non-precipitating, light-precipitating, liquid-dominant precipitating, well-mixed precipitating, and ice-dominant precipitating clouds. We verified the results of the classification of different precipitation cases over tropical regions. For both the hurricane and front cases, the results show that the distributions of categorized cloud pixels can reflect the horizontal structure of the weather systems. The monthly gridded mean frequencies of categorized precipitating clouds are used to analyze the relationship between the seasonal and interannual cycles of tropical precipitation and clouds’ hydrometeor components. Moreover, the results indicated that in an annual cycle or an ENSO cycle, when the local precipitation frequencies increase, the occurrence frequencies of all kinds of rain clouds will increase. However, among those precipitating systems, the proportions of ice-dominant and well-mixed clouds increases while that of water-dominant clouds decrease as the local precipitation increases. Anomalies of the opposite sign tend to accompany the decreasing precipitations situations. Overall, the classification method proves to be useful to extract objective information from observed emission and scattering signals. Since clouds have always been signs of the weather systems, the long-term variances of global distribution and characteristics of rain clouds are as an aspect of cloud climatology. Moreover, the categorization of precipitation types can be useful in developing the best retrieval algorithm of rain rate for a specific cloud type. Additionally, the information about cloud types can be used to improve our understanding of cloud processes and to increase the accuracy of weather and climate models. / A Thesis submitted to the Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Science in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science. / Spring Semester 2019. / March 5, 2019. / Classification, Emission, Microwave, Rain clouds, Scattering / Includes bibliographical references. / Guosheng Liu, Professor Directing Thesis; Vasubandhu Misra, Committee Member; Allison Wing, Committee Member.
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The use of Long-Lived Tracer Observations to Examine Transport Characteristics in the Lower StratosphereLingenfelser, Gretchen Scott 01 January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Net Surface Flux Budget Over Tropical Oceans Estimated from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM)Fan, Tai-Fang 01 January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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Explicit numerical study of aerosol-cloud interactions in boundary layer cloudsPaunova, Irena T. January 2006 (has links)
No description available.
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The development of a warm-season blocking index for the Northern Hemisphere /Von Appen, Florian. January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Detailed observations of ice pellets and an analysis of their characteristics and formation mechanismsGibson, Steven R. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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A model of wind-forced viscous circulation near coastal boundariesSpillane, Michael Cornelius 20 May 1980 (has links)
Graduation date: 1981
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On the relationship between winter storms, strong winds, and the associated pressure field along a rugged western coastMcDonough, Thomas Andrew 21 September 1976 (has links)
Two successive years of wind speed and direction data, from
January 1973 through December 1974, have been measured and
recorded at Yaquina Head, 6 km north of Newport, Oregon. Analysis
of the data permitted 65 cases of strong wind to be isolated and
separated into four distinct wind speed categories. With the aid of
surface charts, upper air sounding, and sea level pressures from
several stations, numerous meteorological events, occurring concurrently
with peak winds at Yaquina Head, have been evaluated for a
significant contribution to the local wind.
Cyclone centers associated with strong coastal wind have been
plotted and analyzed with regard to location, speed and direction of
motion, sea surface pressure, and pressure change during periods
of strong winds. The result of this analysis indicates that many cases
of strong coastal wind measured at Yaquina Head are associated with
cyclones located southwest of Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
The pressure change experienced by these cyclones is related to the
strength of the observed wind at Yaquina Head. Likewise, the locations
of these pressure centers are related to the duration of strong
wind measured at Yaquina Head. The direction of motion of the
cyclones and the value of the sea surface pressure at the center of
the cyclones seem unrelated to local wind speed.
Frontal zones associated with cases of strong wind have been
evaluated with regard to type, speed, and direction of motion prior
to strong surface winds. No relationship was found between these
factors and the strength of the wind.
The direction of the wind versus the speed of the wind was
reviewed and the results were separated into several classes. The
result of this classification indicated that in 73 percent of the cases
the measured peak wind occurred prior to an abrupt veering of the
wind. Only 21 percent of the cases lacked this wind shift.
The local pressure field was examined for pressure differences
which might result in a strong coastal wind flow. Station
pressures from three locations were used as well as barograms
from Newport, Oregon, in describing the pressure field. No correlation
between these pressures differences and the strength of the
local wind could be found. Finally, the north-south component of
the geostrophic wind was calculated and compared with speed of the
measured wind. No consistent agreement could be established
between the measured surface wind speed and the calculated north-
south component of the geostrophic wind.
The lack of data west of Yaquina Head and Oregon Coast
continue to present a problem for those who consider coastal winds. / Graduation date: 1977
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Subseasonal variability in a two-level atmospheric general circulation modelKushnir, Yochanan 13 December 1984 (has links)
The dynamical processes which maintain atmospheric disturbances
in regions of strong wintertime variability of the northern hemisphere
are examined using data from a GCM simulation. Time series of the
dependent variables and diabatic heating components from 10 Northern
Hemisphere winters simulated by the Oregon State University two-level
GCM are used. Variance and covariance analyses are performed to
determine the geographical distribution of the intensities and transport
properties of high-frequency (periods between 2.5 and 10 days)
and low-frequency (periods between 10 days and a season) eddies.
These are compared with existing observations and the discrepancies
are discussed in terms of their dynamical consistency with the
time-mean circulation.
The energetics of high-frequency and low-frequency eddies are
studied. It is found that the behavior of high-frequency eddies is
consistent with baroclinic instability theory. Low-frequency eddies
appear to be maintained mainly by a high-latitude baroclinic energy
cycle. Energy conversions characteristic of barotropic processes are
also significant at jet-stream-latitudes. The process of wave-energy
dispersion is found to be an important factor governing the geographical
distribution of low-frequency activity at middle latitudes.
The nature of the systems causing low-frequency variability over
the North Pacific Ocean is examined by applying complex EOF analysis
to the time series of geopotential height anomalies. The first eigenmode
of this analysis describes a wave of planetary scale extending
from northeastern Asia to the Gulf of Mexico across the North Pacific
basin. While the phase of this wave retrogrades along the continental
borders of the ocean basin, energy propagates in the opposite direction
and penetrates as far as the central North Atlantic. The dynamical
characteristics of this disturbance are examined by complex covariance
analysis between the first mode's principal component and the
dependent-variable fields. It is found that the disturbance grows
mainly through baroclinic processes with some contribution from barotropic
processes.
On the basis of these results it is proposed that the observed
differences between the high- and low-frequency disturbances result
from their being generated in different geographical regions where
sphericity and the properties of the stationary flow cause baroclinic
growth of structurally different modes. / Graduation date: 1985
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A conditional analysis method applied to globally intermittent turbulenceKlipp, Cheryl L. 03 December 2002 (has links)
Globally intermittent turbulence is characterized by sudden switching from
significant turbulence to weak turbulence and back on time scales ranging from
seconds to tens of minutes as opposed to microscale intermittency, which is due
to organization of small scale gradients by individual eddies on scales as small as
the Kolmogorov microscale. This thesis examines globally intermittent turbulent
atmospheric data by a conditional analysis technique.
The conditional analysis separates the stronger turbulence sections of data
from the weak sections and analyzes each type separately. This analysis is applied
to two different sources of global intermittency. One case arises from the undulating
structure of the top of a convective internal boundary layer that was forming due to
a cool marine boundary layer being modified by a sun-heated beach. The other case
is nocturnal boundary layer intermittency, the causes of which are not well known.
When applied to the top of the convective internal boundary layer, the conditional
analysis performs well in that a turbulent kinetic energy budget can be
balanced. Conventional analysis of the same data is unsatisfactory. The conditional
analysis improves the behavior of relationships for nocturnal intermittency, especially in that it reduces non-stationarity, but it does not explain all the scatter in
the data. This may be due to the large role of self-correlation in the traditional
presentation of the data. / Graduation date: 2003
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