The Effect of Freezing Drizzle, Sleet and Snow on Microphysical Characteristics of Supercooled Fog during the Icing Process in a Mountainous Area
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Observation Site and Instruments
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. General Characteristics of Drizzle/Sleet/Snow–Mixed Fog
3.2. Effect of Drizzle/Sleet/Snow on Number Concentrations of Fog
3.3. Evolution of Fog Droplet Spectra under the Influence of Drizzle/Sleet/Snow
3.4. Quantitative Estimation for Fog Droplet Size Distribution under the Influence of Drizzle/Sleet/Snow
3.5. Microphysical Mechanisms of Fog under the Influence of Drizzle/Sleet/Snow
4. Conclusions
- (1)
- In icing processes of mountainous areas, liquid precipitation was a relatively stable form of precipitation. The duration of precipitation was usually more than 5 h with temperature above 0 °C, while 1–3 h short-term precipitation was dominant with temperature below 0 °C. Due to the high altitude of the observational site, the visibility was below 1000 m for a long time. The rainfall intensity of freezing drizzle was substantially below 0.2 mm·h−1, while that of sleet and snow was greater than 1 mm·h−1. Precipitation occurred at different periods of fog processes, but sleet and snow mainly occurred in the dissipation and oscillation periods. When precipitation occurred, the number concentration, diameter and liquid water content of fog were 300 cm−3, 5 μm and 0.02–0.17 g·cm−3, respectively, which were lower than those of fog processes in other regions.
- (2)
- The wet scavenging effect of freezing drizzle on small fog droplets with a size range less than 6–12 μm was weak but stronger for fog droplets with a larger size, which was opposite to the effects of solid precipitation. Moreover, the number concentrations of small droplets had a strong negative correlation with those of large droplets under the influence of precipitation. Droplet spectra had a basic bimodal pattern, with the peak value located at 3 μm and 11–13 μm. Freezing drizzle increased the number concentrations at 3 μm and decreased the values at 11–13 μm, while the occurrence of solid precipitation significantly broadened the droplet spectra.
- (3)
- Under the suppression of raindrops, the distributions of fog droplets showed regular evolution. The distributions of droplet spectra changed from leptokartosis to platykurtosis and from positive skewness to negative skewness with the increase in diameter. The spectrum was closest to a platykurtic distribution under the influence of sleet/snow. In addition, when the average diameter of the fog droplets was smaller than 4 μm, the skewness of the droplet spectrum was greater under the conditions of freezing drizzle.
- (4)
- Fog droplets mainly affected by activation with subsequent condensational growth (deactivation via complete droplet evaporation) would lead to the co-variations of N, r, and L, when fog processes were in the maturity, dissipation and oscillation periods. Freezing drizzle would improve the positive correlation of N-r in the dissipation and oscillation periods and reduce the negative correlation of N-r in the maturity period. The relationships among N, r and L demonstrated a strong negative correlation when the fog process was in the development period. The major microphysical mechanism in this period was collision-coalescence, while the occurrence of freezing drizzle would result in the transition of relationships of N-L and N-r into positive correlations. With the advent of solid precipitation particles, relationships of N-L and N-r would transit into negative correlation. Moreover, the number concentrations of small droplets decreased and those for large droplets increased under the influence of snow, causing the negative correlation of N-r to be stronger than that of N-L.
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Event | Time | Precipitation Type | Duration (min) | R (mm·h−1) | Nfog (cm−3) | Lfog (g·m−3) | Dfog (μm) | Period |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
case1 | 15 February 2009 16:25–18:30 | freezing drizzle | 125 | 0.47 | 257.69 | 0.11 | 3.85 | development |
case2 | 17 February 2009 01:00–02:35 | freezing drizzle | 95 | 0.09 | 289.10 | 0.15 | 4.47 | maturity |
case3 | 17 February 2009 12:30–13:35 | freezing drizzle | 65 | 0.23 | 151.53 | 0.17 | 5.40 | maturity |
case4 | 18 February 2009 20:00–21:10 | sleet | 70 | 4.16 | 86.75 | 0.07 | 4.78 | oscillation |
case5 | 1 March 2009 00:10–01:35 | snow | 85 | 1.33 | 305.45 | 0.08 | 3.31 | dissipation |
case6 | 1 March 2009 04:00–06:20 | sleet | 140 | 3.32 | 161.58 | 0.04 | 2.88 | dissipation |
case7 | 2 March 2009 09:50–11:00 | freezing drizzle | 70 | 0.09 | 254.81 | 0.04 | 2.32 | dissipation |
case8 | 3 March 2009 06:15–11:20 | freezing drizzle | 305 | 0.36 | 129.25 | 0.09 | 3.93 | oscillation |
case9 | 3 March 2009 14:00–15:15 | freezing drizzle | 75 | 0.09 | 120.66 | 0.04 | 2.85 | oscillation |
case10 | 9 January 2010 23:50–10 January 03:05 | freezing drizzle | 195 | 0.12 | 187.12 | 0.13 | 4.65 | maturity |
case11 | 10 January 2010 13:50–17:10 | freezing drizzle | 200 | 0.17 | 123.83 | 0.06 | 3.73 | dissipation |
case12 | 10 January 2010 23:50–11 January 01:20 | freezing drizzle | 90 | 0.20 | 223.64 | 0.02 | 1.91 | oscillation |
case13 | 21 January 2010 23:00–22 January 03:00 | freezing drizzle | 240 | 0.08 | 213.75 | 0.13 | 4.56 | maturity |
case14 | 22 January 2010 08:45–10:30 | freezing drizzle | 105 | 0.18 | 359.24 | 0.10 | 3.30 | maturity |
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Zhou, Y.; Niu, S.; Lü, J.; Zhou, Y. The Effect of Freezing Drizzle, Sleet and Snow on Microphysical Characteristics of Supercooled Fog during the Icing Process in a Mountainous Area. Atmosphere 2016, 7, 143. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos7110143
Zhou Y, Niu S, Lü J, Zhou Y. The Effect of Freezing Drizzle, Sleet and Snow on Microphysical Characteristics of Supercooled Fog during the Icing Process in a Mountainous Area. Atmosphere. 2016; 7(11):143. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos7110143
Chicago/Turabian StyleZhou, Yue, Shengjie Niu, Jingjing Lü, and Yuehua Zhou. 2016. "The Effect of Freezing Drizzle, Sleet and Snow on Microphysical Characteristics of Supercooled Fog during the Icing Process in a Mountainous Area" Atmosphere 7, no. 11: 143. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos7110143
APA StyleZhou, Y., Niu, S., Lü, J., & Zhou, Y. (2016). The Effect of Freezing Drizzle, Sleet and Snow on Microphysical Characteristics of Supercooled Fog during the Icing Process in a Mountainous Area. Atmosphere, 7(11), 143. https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos7110143