@article{96ab866c82b8462fa6455575f4541e16,
title = "Predicting the inland penetration of long-lake-axis-parallel snowbands",
abstract = "Predicting the inland penetration of lake-effect long-lake-axis-parallel (LLAP) snowbands is crucial to public safety because LLAP bands can produce hazardous weather well downwind of the parent lake. Accordingly, hypotheses for the variation in inland penetration of LLAP-band radar echoes (InPen) are formulated and tested. The hypothesis testing includes an examination of statistical relationships between environmental variables and InPen for 34 snapshots of LLAP bands observed during the Ontario Winter Lake-effect Systems (OWLeS) field campaign. Several previously proposed predictors of LLAP-band formation or InPen demonstrate weak correlations with InPen during OWLeS. A notable exception is convective boundary layer (CBL) depth, which is strongly correlated with InPen. In addition to CBL depth, InPen is strongly correlated with cold-air advection in the upper portion of the CBL, suggesting that boundary layer destabilization produced by vertically differential cold-air advection may be an important inland power source for preexisting LLAP bands. This power production is quantified through atmospheric energetics and the resulting variable, differential thermal advection power (DTAP), yields reasonably skillful predictions of InPen. Nevertheless, an InPen model developed using DTAP is outperformed by an empirical model combining CBL depth and potential temperature advection in the upper portion of the CBL. This two-variable model explains 76% of the observed InPen variance when tested on independent data. Finally, implications for operational forecasting of InPen are discussed.",
author = "Eipper, {Daniel T.} and Young, {George S.} and Greybush, {Steven J.} and Seth Saslo and Sikora, {Todd D.} and Clark, {Richard D.}",
note = "Funding Information: Acknowledgments. We gratefully acknowledge the entire team of OWLeS scientists and students for their dedicated field work under challenging conditions. We thank Yvette Richardson, Peter Bannon, Jack Langelaan, David Stauffer, Michael Jurewicz, Samuel Haimov, Jeffrey French, Neil Laird, Dave Kristovich, and Tim Hewson for many helpful discussions and suggestions. Insightful reviews by Jim Steenburgh, Editor Matthew J. Bunkers, and two anonymous reviewers greatly improved the quality of this manuscript. Special thanks are extended to the EOL of NCAR for maintaining the OWLeS data repository. We thank Kyle Imhoff for helping us access the NARR data. This work was funded by National Science Foundation Grants AGS-1259011 and AGS-1259020. Funding Information: We gratefully acknowledge the entire team of OWLeS scientists and students for their dedicated field work under challenging conditions. We thank Yvette Richardson, Peter Bannon, Jack Langelaan, David Stauffer, Michael Jurewicz, Samuel Haimov, Jeffrey French, Neil Laird, Dave Kristovich, and Tim Hewson for many helpful discussions and suggestions. Insightful reviews by Jim Steenburgh, Editor Matthew J. Bunkers, and two anonymous reviewers greatly improved the quality of this manuscript. Special thanks are extended to the EOL of NCAR for maintaining the OWLeS data repository. We thank Kyle Imhoff for helping us access the NARR data. This work was funded by National Science Foundation Grants AGS-1259011 and AGS-1259020 Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018 American Meteorological Society.",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1175/WAF-D-18-0033.1",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "33",
pages = "1435--1451",
journal = "Weather and Forecasting",
issn = "0882-8156",
publisher = "American Meteorological Society",
number = "5",
}