Publications
ECP 0857P final report for the NEXRAD ROC: Modified VCP 35
Summary
Summary
This report responds to a request by the NEXRAD ROC through the FAA to close out ECP0857P in their records. It details the motivation for the modification to the radar coverage pattern called VCP 35, its deployment, and use coordinated with nearby in situ ICICLE flight missions or independent of...
The 2017 Buffalo Area Icing and Radar Study (BAIRS II)
Summary
Summary
The second Buffalo Area Icing and Radar Study (BAIRS II) was conducted during the winter of 2017. The BAIRS II partnership between Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Lincoln Laboratory (LL), the National Research Council of Canada (NRC), and Environment and Climate Change Canada (ECCC) was sponsored by the Federal Aviation...
Polarimetric observations of chaff using the WSR-88D network
Summary
Summary
Chaff is a radar countermeasure typically used by military branches in training exercises around the United States. Chaff within view of the S-band WSR-88D radars can appear prominently on radar users displays. Knowledge of chaff characteristics is useful for radar users to discriminate between chaff and weather echoes and for...
Development of a new inanimate class for the WSR-88D hydrometeor classification algorithm
Summary
Summary
The current implementation of the Hydrometeor Classification Algorithm (HCA) on the WSR-88D network contains two non-hydrometeor-based classes: ground clutter/anomalous propagation and biologicals. A number of commonly observed non-hydrometeor-based phenomena do not fall into either of these two HCA categories, but often are misclassified as ground clutter, biologicals, unknown, or worse...
WSR-88D chaff detection and characterization using an optimized hydrometeor classification algorithm
Summary
Summary
Chaff presents multiple issues for aviation, air traffic controllers, and the FAA, including false weather identification and areas where flight paths may need to be altered. Chaff is a radar countermeasure commonly released from aircraft across the United States and is comprised of individual metallic strands designed to reflect certain...
Evaluation of the baseline NEXRAD icing hazard project
Summary
Summary
MIT Lincoln Laboratory has developed an icing hazard product that is now operational throughout the NEXRAD network. This initial version of the Icing Hazard Levels (IHL) algorithm is predicated on the presence of graupel as determined by the NEXRAD Hydrometeor Classification Algorithm (HCA). Graupel indicates that rime accretion on ice...
Aircraft in situ validation of hydrometeors and icing conditions inferred by ground-based NEXRAD polarimetric radar
Summary
Summary
MIT Lincoln Laboratory is tasked by the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration to investigate the use of the NEXRAD polarimetric radars for the remote sensing of icing conditions hazardous to aircraft. A critical aspect of the investigation concerns validation that has relied upon commercial airline icing pilot reports and a dedicated...
The 2013 Buffalo Area Icing and Radar Study (BAIRS)
Summary
Summary
The Next Generation Weather Radar (NEXRAD) network completed a dual polarization upgrade in 2013. The radars now can be used to sense the type of scatterers that cause the radar returns. The scatterers can be hydrometeors, biologicals, or earth-sourced. The ability to reliably interpret the radar-sensed thermodynamic phase of the...
Measurements of differential reflectivity in snowstorms and warm season stratiform systems
Summary
Summary
The organized behavior of differential radar reflectivity (ZDR) is documented in the cold regions of a wide variety of stratiform precipitation types occurring in both winter and summer. The radar targets and attendant cloud microphysical conditions are interpreted within the context of measurements of ice crystal types in laboratory diffusion...
Validation of NEXRAD radar differential reflectivity in snowstorms with airborne microphysical measurements: evidence for hexagonal flat plate crystals
Summary
Summary
This study is concerned with the use of cloud microphysical aircraft measurements (the Convair 580) to verify the origin of differential reflectivity (ZDR) measured with a ground-based radar (the WSR-88D KBUF radar in Buffalo, New York). The underlying goal is to make use of the radar measurements to infer the...