
Related items loading ...
Section 1: Publication
Publication Type
Journal Article
Authorship
Thériault, J. M., Hung, I., Vaquer, P., Stewart, R. E., & Pomeroy, J. W.
Title
Precipitation characteristics and associated weather conditions on the eastern slopes of the Canadian Rockies during March-April 2015
Year
2018
Publication Outlet
Hydrology & Earth System Sciences, 22(8), 4491 - 4512
DOI
ISBN
ISSN
Citation
Thériault, J. M., Hung, I., Vaquer, P., Stewart, R. E., & Pomeroy, J. W. (2018). Precipitation characteristics and associated weather conditions on the eastern slopes of the Canadian Rockies during March-April 2015. Hydrology & Earth System Sciences, 22(8), 4491 - 4512.
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-22-4491-2018
Abstract
Precipitation events that bring rain and snow to the Banff–Calgary area of Alberta are a critical aspect of the region's water cycle and can lead to major flooding events such as the June 2013 event that was the second most costly natural disaster in Canadian history. Because no special atmospheric-oriented observations of these events have been made, a field experiment was conducted in March and April 2015 in Kananaskis, Alberta, to begin to fill this gap. The goal was to characterize and better understand the formation of the precipitation at the surface during spring 2015 at a specific location in the Kananaskis Valley. Within the experiment, detailed measurements of precipitation and weather conditions were obtained, a vertically pointing Doppler radar was deployed and weather balloons were released. Although 17 precipitation events occurred, this period was associated with much less precipitation than normal (−35 %) and above-normal temperatures (2.5 ∘C). Of the 133 h of observed precipitation, solid precipitation occurred 71 % of the time, mixed precipitation occurred 9 % and rain occurred 20 %. An analysis of 17 504 precipitation particles from 1181 images showed that a wide variety of crystals and aggregates occurred and approximately 63 % showed signs of riming. This was largely independent of whether flows aloft were upslope (easterly) or downslope (westerly). In the often sub-saturated surface conditions, hydrometeors containing ice occurred at temperatures as high as 9 ∘C. Radar structures aloft were highly variable with reflectivity sometimes >30 dBZe and Doppler velocity up to −1 m s−1, which indicates upward motion of particles within ascending air masses. Precipitation was formed in this region within cloud fields sometimes having variable structures and within which supercooled water at least sometimes existed to produce accreted particles massive enough to reach the surface through the relatively dry sub-cloud region.
Plain Language Summary
Precipitation events associated with rain and snow on the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains, Canada, are a critical aspect of the regional water cycle. The goal is to characterize the precipitation and weather conditions in the Kananaskis Valley, Alberta, during a field experiment. Mainly dense solid precipitation reached the surface and occurred during downslope and upslope conditions. The precipitation phase has critical implications on the severity of flooding events in the area.