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10 - Measuring precipitation with radar

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 October 2009

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Summary

Its short history

Radar was developed in the 1940s for the detection of aircraft, and the effects of precipitation on the received signal were originally seen as an inconvenient source of interference. However, even in the late 1940s it was recognised that radar could be used to measure precipitation. Kurtyka (1953) remarked that ‘In the last five years, the necessity of adequate precipitation instruments to calibrate radar for precipitation measurement has pointed to the primitiveness of the present-day rain gauge.’ He went on to say that ‘In all likelihood, the rain gauge of the future may be radar, for even in its present developmental stage, radar measures rainfall more accurately than a network of one rain gauge per 200 square miles.’ But radar has not replaced raingauges, and while it has advanced greatly over the years, it still relies on in situ data from telemetering raingauges to calibrate the system, although this need may eventually be overcome.

Principle of operation

One of the great advantages of radar is that it gives an areal estimate of precipitation rather than a single-point measurement, and the area covered is quite large, typically about 15,000 km2 for each station. It also has the advantages of giving data in real time and of not needing anything to be installed in the area, or even access to the area.

In a weather radar system, the dish alternately transmits a pulse of microwaves and then switches to receive the returned (or more correctly ‘scattered’) pulse.

Type
Chapter
Information
Precipitation
Theory, Measurement and Distribution
, pp. 190 - 201
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2006

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References

Collier, C. G. (1985). Accuracy of real-time estimates made using radar. In Proceedings of the Weather Radar and Flood Warning Symposium. University of LancasterGoogle Scholar
Collier, C. G. (1986). Accuracy of rainfall estimates by radar, part 1: calibration by telemetering raingauges. Journal of Hydrology, 83, 207–223CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Collier, C. G. (2002). Developments in radar and remote-sensing methods for measuring and forecasting rainfall. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London A, 360, 1345–1361CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hall, M. P. M. (1984). A review of the application of multi-parameter radar measurements of precipitation. Radio Science 19, 37–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, M. P. M., Cherry, S. M., Goddard, J. W. F. and Kennedy, G. R. (1980). Rain drop sizes and rainfall rate measured by dual-polarization radar. Nature, 285, 195–198CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hogan, R. F. and Illingworth, A. J. (1999). Analysis of radar and lidar returns from clouds: implications for the proposed Earth Radiation Mission. CLARE'98 Final Report. In ESTEC International Workshop Proceedings WPP-170, European Space Agency/ESTEC. Noordwijk, September 1999, pp.75–82Google Scholar
Kilburn, C. D. D., Chapman, D., Illingworth, A. J. and Hogan, R. J. (2000). Weather observations from the Chilbolton Advanced Meteorological Radar. Weather, 55, 352–356CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kurtyka, J. C. (1953). Precipitation Measurement Study. Report of investigation 20, State Water Survey, Illinois. Urbana, IL: Department of Registration and EducationGoogle Scholar
Smyth, T. J., Blackman, T. M. and Illingworth, A. J. (1999). Observations of oblate hail using dual polarization radar and implications for hail detection schemes. Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society, 125, 993–1016Google Scholar

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