Dual-polarization radar data can be used for microphysical retrievals of such processes, allowing for experimental quantification of the impact of these warm-rain processes on the polarimetric radar variables. For this study, high-resolution vertical cross-sections (genuine RHI scans with 0.1⁰ elevation angle spacing) were collected with the X-band dual-polarization radar in Bonn, Germany (BOXPOL) in June 2011, during a period of warm-rain convective precipitation. Vertical profiles of the polarimetric radar variables extracted from these scans are used to retrieve DSD parameters. In doing so, we can quantify changes in the retrieved DSD owing to processes such as coalescence and identify when such processes are dominant (and when they are not). Such retrievals provide experimental evidence that can be used for comparison with various models and parameterizations of the warm-rain physical processes. Additionally, they provide a basis for better understanding of how such microphysical processes affect rainfall rate beneath cloud base, which can be used to improve the accuracy of remote quantitative precipitation estimation.
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