Geophysical Research Letters (Aug 2021)
Microphysical Origin of Raindrop Size Distributions During the Indian Monsoon
Abstract
Abstract Surface raindrop size distributions over a rain shadow region during the Indian summer monsoon are clustered using the k‐means algorithm. The rainfall for five dominant clusters has distinct vertical features in polarimetric radar and micro rain radar. The deep convection with low cloud bases and high liquid water is associated with sharply increasing radar reflectivity at low levels and the largest drops at the surface. The large drops, originated by ice processes, break while falling below the melting layer, causing a peak in raindrops smaller than 0.5 mm diameter near the cloud base, where the falling raindrops rapidly grow by collision‐coalescence without breaking. The number concentration in the stratiform rain is relatively moderate; hence a gradual raindrop growth, and uniform vertical reflectivity. However, few raindrops in stratiform rain grow to a larger diameter than in convective rain, for the same rain rate due to the absence of collisional breakup.
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