The Influence of Atmospheric Rivers on Cold-Season Precipitation in the Upper Great Lakes Region

Submitted by LisaN on
Publication Year
Authors
Mateling, M. E., C. Pettersen, M. S. Kulie, K. S. Mattingly, S. A. Henderson, and T. S. L’Ecuyer
Journal
JGR Atmospheres
Volume
126(13)
Page Numbers
e2021JD034754
DOI
10.1029/2021JD034754
Mission Affiliation
Major Category

Snowfall in the Northern Great Lakes: Lessons Learned from a Multisensor Observatory

Submitted by LisaN on
Publication Year
Authors
Kulie, M. S., C. Pettersen, A. J. Merrelli, T. J. Wagner, N. B. Wood, M. Dutter, D. Beachler, T. Kluber, R. Turner, M. Mateling, J. Lenters, P. Blanken, M. Maahn, C. Spence, S. Kneifel, P. A. Kucera, A. Tokay, L. F. Bliven, D. B. Wolff, and W. A. Petersen
Journal
Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc.
Volume
102(7)
Page Numbers
E1317–E1339
DOI
10.1175/BAMS-D-19-0128.1
Mission Affiliation
Major Category

A Parameterization of the Cloud Scattering Polarization Signal Derived From GPM Observations for Microwave Fast Radative Transfer Models

Submitted by LisaN on
Publication Year
Authors
Galligani, V. S., D. Wang, P. B. Corrales, and C. Prigent
Journal
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
Volume
59(11)
Page Numbers
8968-8977
DOI
10.1109/TGRS.2021.3049921
Mission Affiliation
Major Category
IMERG rainfall totals from recent atmospheric river.
The Pacific Northwest experienced a memorable series of storms in late Oct. 2021 as several low-pressure systems rolled in from the northeast Pacific Ocean. One of the systems was classified by meteorologists as a “bomb cyclone”, meaning that its central pressure (an indication of storm strength) had dropped particularly rapidly in a short time period. At its minimum pressure (highest strength), the system was reported by the National Weather Service to have had the lowest pressure of a system over the northeastern Pacific Ocean since reliable observations began in 1974. The system was notable