Details of Award
NERC Reference : NE/V001183/1
GRACES (G-band RAdar for Cloud and prEcipitation Studies)
Grant Award
- Principal Investigator:
- Dr A Battaglia, University of Leicester, Physics and Astronomy
- Co-Investigator:
- Dr C Westbrook, University of Reading, Meteorology
- Co-Investigator:
- Professor P Huggard, STFC - Laboratories, RAL Space
- Co-Investigator:
- Professor B Ellison, STFC - Laboratories, RAL Space
- Grant held at:
- University of Leicester, Physics and Astronomy
- Science Area:
- Atmospheric
- Freshwater
- Overall Classification:
- Panel B
- ENRIs:
- Global Change
- Science Topics:
- Radiative Processes & Effects
- Tropospheric Processes
- Water In The Atmosphere
- Climate & Climate Change
- Technol. for Environ. Appl.
- Abstract:
- Despite the well-recognised influence of clouds and precipitation on our climate, there are still critical gaps in our ability to observe cloud properties that are needed to test and improve how cloud processes are represented in models. This leads to clouds and aerosols being the biggest source of uncertainty in climate models, according to the IPCC. In addition, uncertainties about cloud processes have important impacts on our ability to predict the weather, because precipitation is produced by clouds, clouds modulate the amount of sunlight we receive during the day and heat we lose at night, and latent heat processes in clouds and precipitation drive dynamical changes in storms. Low-altitude clouds of liquid water droplets cover large swathes of the globe, and cool the earth's climate. However our ability to simulate these clouds in climate models is poor, and the production of drizzle has been identified as a key weakness. We need new observations to unravel the processes in these clouds and improve their representation in simulations. Meanwhile ice clouds cover around one third of the earth at any one time, and provide a net warming on average. However the magnitude of this warming is very uncertain, and their impact on our climate is very sensitive to what we assume about their physics. Thus we urgently need to constrain those physical processes controlling how ice particles evolve in natural clouds. Finally, stratiform precipitation is an important component of the hydrological cycle and the radiation budget. Typically such precipitation include an ice phase aloft and a liquid phase at lower altitude. Yet there are processes in both phases which remain uncertain, and require new observations to robustly constrain them. Our novel proposal exploits new radar technology to break through the current limitations on the information we can currently retrieve about cloud properties and the processes that drive the evolution of the hydrometeors within them. With the help of our project partners at the Met Office and the ECMWF we will use this information to improve the simulation of cloud processes in weather and climate forecasts. In 2018 the UK Space Agency and Centre for Earth Observation Instrumentation agreed to fund the development of a new 200 GHz (G-band) Doppler radar system, called GRaCE, led by investigators Huggard and Battaglia. This ground-breaking demonstrator instrument will collect its first data at the Chilbolton Observatory early in 2020, and will be able to penetrate multiple layers of clouds with unprecedented sensitivity to small sub-millimetre particle thanks to the radar 1.5 mm wavelength, the smallest for any cloud radar system worldwide. The radar will be operated for 22 months in synergy with a suite of other remote sensing instruments. The unprecedented dataset will be exploited by GRACES scientists who are leaders in radar remote sensing techniques and have spearheaded retrieval techniques for multi-wavelength Doppler radars. Vertical profiles of cloud physical properties including water content as well as drizzle drop and ice crystal size distributions will be obtained and this data will be used to test the representation of cloud processes in numerical models in much greater detail than has been possible before. Through this leap forward in our ability to observe clouds the GRACES system will become the forerunner for future development of a new stream of ground-based remote sensing instruments, greatly strengthening the current Earth observing system. The high frequency of the radar means that it will also be suitable for development into air-borne/space-borne instruments for cloud related studies, and indeed the proposal is very timely given parallel efforts at NASA's JPL to build an airborne differential absorption radar (for measuring water vapour) at smaller frequencies (165 to 173 GHz), and to develop CubeSat radars in the G-band (see NASA-JPL's LoS).
- NERC Reference:
- NE/V001183/1
- Grant Stage:
- Completed
- Scheme:
- Standard Grant FEC
- Grant Status:
- Closed
- Programme:
- Standard Grant
This grant award has a total value of £555,021
FDAB - Financial Details (Award breakdown by headings)
DI - Other Costs | Indirect - Indirect Costs | DA - Investigators | DI - Staff | DA - Estate Costs | DI - T&S | DA - Other Directly Allocated |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
£31,031 | £209,109 | £42,664 | £197,884 | £55,114 | £16,716 | £2,503 |
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