Insights into the relation between vertical cloud structure and dynamics of three polar lows: Observations from COMBLE

The vertical structure of three polar lows is described using profiling radar, lidar, and passive remote sensors deployed at a coastal site in northern Norway. The data were collected as part of the Cold-air Outbreaks in the Marine Boundary Layer Experiment (COMBLE). These data are examined in the c...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society
Other Authors: Lackner, Christian P. (author), Geerts, Bart (author), Wang, Yonggang (author), Juliano, Timothy W. (author), Xue, Lulin (author), Kosović, Branko (author), Turner, David D. (author)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.4543
Description
Summary:The vertical structure of three polar lows is described using profiling radar, lidar, and passive remote sensors deployed at a coastal site in northern Norway. The data were collected as part of the Cold-air Outbreaks in the Marine Boundary Layer Experiment (COMBLE). These data are examined in the context of satellite imagery, operational weather radar reflectivity imagery, and output from the AROME Arctic model. A comparison to satellite images shows that AROME-Arctic captured the polar lows well. All three polar lows form in marine cold-air outbreaks and are surrounded by open-cellular convection typical of such outbreaks. Two of the lows form in a forward shear environment and one under reverse shear. Initially, the three polar lows are comma shaped; two of them transition to be more spiraliform at their mature stage and have mostly cloud-free warm cores. The warm cores are the result of a warm-seclusion process. All three lows have stratiform precipitation bands, marked by little cloud liquid water, and rather high surface precipitation rate. The vertical drafts and turbulence in these stratiform clouds are generally weak. All three lows also have convective clouds, which have stronger vertical drafts, stronger turbulence, and pockets of high liquid water content. DESC0021151