English Spanish about VOCALS science people instruments postcards results kids educators links gallery interactive  
Advanced Intermediate Beginner



   Image courtesy of Matthew Miller

From: Matthew Miller
NOAA RV Ronald H. Brown, October 23, 2008

Ronald H. Brown's Radar Observes Drizzle

The R/V Ronald Brown has a scanning precipitation radar. This is a valuable research instrument. For the VOCALS project, it is an essential part of observing drizzle and making rain maps of the marine stratocumulus.

Marine stratocumulus occurs in two configurations: open-cell and closed-cell. The cells that compose a large area of marine stratocumulus arrange themselves in a honeycomb-like pattern. Closed-cell stratocumulus has cloud in the middle of the cell with clear areas along the edges of the cell. Open-cell stratocumulus has the opposite - cloud around the edges and an open area in the middle.

When we use the Ronald Brown's radar to observe drizzle, the drizzle patterns match the arrangement of the clouds for a given cell. The image for this postcard shows a radar scan from the Ronald Brown that captures the drizzle around an open cell. The ring-shaped pattern in the lower right denotes the drizzle that we expect to see around the edges of open-cell stratocumulus clouds.

VOCALS Research Results

Postcards from the Field: Climate Science from the Southeast Pacific



Credits Settings Sponsorship Membership Contact us About the site Site map Help Myths People News Arts, books and film Images and multimedia Tours Life Geology Physics Space weather Space Missions Solar system Astronomy and the Universe Shop for science stuff Games Ask a scientist Journal Comets Dwarfs Neptune Uranus Saturn Jupiter Asteroids Mars Earth Venus Mercury Sun Teacher resources Kids Space Search Home
Page created October 31, 2008 by The VOCALS Team .
The source of this material is Windows to the Universe, at http://www.windows.ucar.edu/ at the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR). ©1995-1999, 2000 The Regents of the University of Michigan; ©2000-05 University Corporation for Atmospheric Research. All Rights Reserved. Site policies and disclaimer