Frontiers in Environmental Science (Nov 2021)

Vertical Structure of a Snowfall Event Based on Observations From the Aircraft and Mountain Station in Beijing

  • Yu Huang,
  • Yu Huang,
  • Yu Huang,
  • Delong Zhao,
  • Delong Zhao,
  • Delong Zhao,
  • Yuanmou Du,
  • Yuanmou Du,
  • Yuanmou Du,
  • Yichen Chen,
  • Lei Zhang,
  • Xia Li,
  • Yingying Jing

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2021.783356
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

Read online

An aircraft platform, ground-based disdrometer, cloud radar, radiometer, and automatic station were combined to study a snowfall case (16:30–21:00 observed by ground cloud radar) on the Yangqing Mountains in Beijing. Comparing the variation of ice habit and number concentration at aircraft altitude (2.9–3.2 km) and ground, we discussed the ice growth mechanisms in the Beijing Mountains. Results indicated that the snowfall was steady but not strong with reflectivity less than 20dBZ, and cloud top altitude less than 4.5 km. The number concentrations for both liquid and ice crystals at aircraft altitude and ground were very similar, both dominated by small particles at diameters of 0.1–1.2 mm, and the proportion of mean number concentrations at small diameters both in the aircraft and on the ground was large, peaking at 44 L−1 mm−1 and 8826 L−1 mm−1 respectively, and decreased rapidly as the diameter increased. There was no mixed phase in clouds with little liquid water. Particles were relatively regular, and were transparent with dendritic and disk-hexagonal shapes. The ice crystals and snowflakes were mainly grown by the deposition and aggregation, rarely by the riming process, and no secondary ice formation was observed.

Keywords