Poster Session 11 Organized Convection and Severe Phenomena: Posters 2.

Thursday, 31 August 2017: 9:30 AM-11:00 AM
Zurich DEFG (Swissotel Chicago)
Host: 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology
Cochairs:
Angela K. Rowe, Univ. of Washington, Atmospheric Sciences, Seattle, WA and Timothy J. Lang, NASA MSFC, Earth Science Branch, Huntsville, AL

Second poster session on studies of impactful events including multi-instrument and multi-platform retrievals (e.g., Multi-Doppler). Covers many scales from tornadoes and microbursts to winter events and hurricanes.

Papers:
215
Severe Weather Identification Using Polarimetric Radar and Machine Learning Techniques
Tulipa Silva, SIMEPAR - Parana Meteorological System, Curitiba, Brazil; and C. Beneti, P. H. Siqueira, M. F. Buzzi, and L. Calvetti
Manuscript (2.1 MB)

Handout (1.4 MB)

216
High-Spatiotemporal Dual-Polarization Radar Observations for a Tornado Case in Korea
Sanghun Lim, Korea Institute of Civil Engineering and Building Technology, Goyang-si, Korea, Republic of (South); and S. Allabakash, B. J. Jang, H. Kim, and V. Chandrasekar

218
Comparison of Scattering Properties of Real Hailstones and Spheroids
Zhiyuan Jiang, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; and M. R. Kumjian, R. S. Schrom, I. M. Giammanco, T. M. Brown-Giammanco, H. E. Estes, R. Maiden, and A. J. Heymsfield

219
Identification of Dual-Polarization C-Band Radar Signatures to Improve Convective Wind Nowcasting at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and NASA Kennedy Space Center
Corey G. Amiot, Univ. of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, AL; and L. D. Carey, W. P. Roeder, T. M. McNamara, and R. J. Blakeslee

Handout (1.1 MB)

220
Gap-Filling Mobile Radar Observations of a Snow Squall in the San Luis Valley
Andrew A. Rosenow, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; and K. W. Howard and J. Meitín

Handout (3.6 MB)

221
An Overview of Hail Detection Techniques Using SHAVE Hail Reports
Kiel L. Ortega, CIMMS/University of Oklahoma and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK

Handout (2.1 MB)

222
Creating a Climatological Database of Three-Dimensional Radar Mosaics with Derived Severe Weather Products: Progress, Challenges, and Moving Forward
Kiel L. Ortega, CIMMS/University of Oklahoma and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; and A. E. Reinhart, B. R. Smith, and D. M. Kingfield

Handout (3.0 MB)

223
Early Operational Successes of the Univ. of Louisiana at Monroe's S-band Polarimetric Doppler Radar
Todd A. Murphy, Univ. of Louisiana, Monroe, LA; and C. Entremont, B. Hughes, J. D. Lamb, and M. B. Mayeaux

Handout (17.3 MB)

224
226
Assessing Tornadic Potential in Nonsupercell Storms By Quantifying the Separation of ZDR and KDP Enhancement Regions
Scott Loeffler, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; and M. R. Kumjian

Handout (61.0 MB)

227
Severe Thunderstorm Life Cycles in the Northeast U.S
Matthew Wunsch, Stony Brook Univ., Stony Brook, NY; and M. M. French

228
Closely Spaced X-band Dual-Wavelength Dual-Polarization Signatures in Melting Hail
Matthew R. Kumjian, Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA; and Y. P. Richardson, T. Meyer, K. A. Kosiba, and J. M. Wurman

229
Airborne Radar Observations of Rainband Structure in Hurricane Ophelia (2005)
Naufal Razin, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; and M. M. Bell

231
Polarimetric Weather Radar Analyses of the Christmas Freezing Rain Storm at Vienna International Airport
Rudolf Kaltenboeck, Austro Control, Innsbruck, Austria; and A. Ryzhkov

232
Hail Climatologies for Sydney and Brisbane, Australia, Derived from Single-Polarization Radar and Insurance Claim Data
Robert A. Warren, Monash Univ., Melbourne, Australia; and J. R. Peter, H. A. Ramsay, S. T. Siems, M. J. Manton, and A. Protat

Handout (2.0 MB)

233
Novel Polarimetric Radar Observations of Upscale Convective Growth near the Sierras de Córdoba
Jake Mulholland, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; and R. J. Trapp, S. W. Nesbitt, P. Salio, L. Vidal, and M. Rugna

234
The Spatiotemporal and Structural Characteristics of Summer Convective Precipitation Systems of Taiwan
Wei-Yu Chang, Chinese Culture Univ., Taipei, Taiwan; and G. B. Wu

235
Tropopause-Overshooting Convection from GridRad Radar Observations
John W. Cooney, Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX; and K. P. Bowman and C. R. Homeyer

237
Identifying Polarimetric Radar Signatures Aloft Associated with Large and Giant Hail
Jeffrey C. Snyder, NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; and A. V. Ryzhkov and J. Krause

Handout (5.9 MB)

238
Significant Events Observed By the Mzzu X-Band Dual-Polarization Radar in Its First 2 Years of Operation
Neil I. Fox, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia, MO; and P. S. Market and J. Wilkerson

239
Mesoscale Environment and Internal Structure of Severe Cold Season QLCS’s over the Southeast U.S
Kevin R. Knupp, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; and D. M. Conrad, C. A. Lisauckis, and A. W. Lyza

240
Verification of the MESH Product over the Canadian Prairies Using a High-Quality Surface Hail Report Dataset Sourced from Social Media
Julian C. Brimelow, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Edmonton, AB, Canada; and N. Taylor
Manuscript (2.1 MB)

- Indicates paper has been withdrawn from meeting
- Indicates an Award Winner