4.4 Article

A Composite Analysis of Snowfall Modes from Four Winter Seasons in Marquette, Michigan

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY
Volume 59, Issue 1, Pages 103-124

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JAMC-D-19-0099.1

Keywords

Atmosphere; Drop size distribution; Freezing precipitation; Radars; Radar observations; Remote sensing; Field experiments

Funding

  1. NOAA [NNX12AQ76G, NNX16AE87G, NNX16AE21G, 80NSSC17K0291, 80NSSC18K0701, 80NSSC19K0712, NA15NES4320001]
  2. NASA

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Presented are four winter seasons of data from an enhanced precipitation instrument suite based at the National Weather Service (NWS) Office in Marquette (MQT), Michigan (250-500 cm of annual snow accumulation). In 2014 the site was augmented with a Micro Rain Radar (MRR) and a Precipitation Imaging Package (PIP). MRR observations are utilized to partition large-scale synoptically driven (deep) and surface-forced (shallow) snow events. Coincident PIP and NWS MQT meteorological surface observations illustrate different characteristics with respect to snow event category. Shallow snow events are often extremely shallow, with MRR-indicated precipitation heights of less than 1500 m above ground level. Large vertical reflectivity gradients indicate efficient particle growth, and increased boundary layer turbulence inferred from observations of spectral width implies increased aggregation in shallow snow events. Shallow snow events occur 2 times as often as deep events; however, both categories contribute approximately equally to estimated annual accumulation. PIP measurements reveal distinct regime-dependent snow microphysical differences, with shallow snow events having broader particle size distributions and comparatively fewer small particles and deep snow events having narrower particle size distributions and comparatively more small particles. In addition, coincident surface meteorological measurements indicate that most shallow snow events are associated with surface winds originating from the northwest (over Lake Superior), cold temperatures, and relatively high surface pressures, which are characteristics that are consistent with cold-air outbreaks. Deep snow events have meteorologically distinct conditions that are accordant with midlatitude cyclones and frontal structures, with mostly southwest surface winds, warmer temperatures approaching freezing, and lower surface pressures.

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