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38th Conference on Radar Meteorology 28 August – 1 September 2017 Swissôtel Hotel Chicago, IL

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Page 1: 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology to web.pdfAttendees who have registered for a one day package may attend, for one calendar day, admission to all conference sessions, exhibits,

38th Conference on

Radar Meteorology

28 August – 1 September 2017

Swissôtel Hotel Chicago, IL

Page 2: 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology to web.pdfAttendees who have registered for a one day package may attend, for one calendar day, admission to all conference sessions, exhibits,

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AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY

ConneCtConference Twitter: #AMSRadar2017

Conference Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AMSradar2017/

organizersThe 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology is organized by the AMS Radar Meteorology and hosted by the American Meteorological Society.

sponsorsThank you to the sponsoring organizations that helped make the 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology possible:

program CommitteeCo-Chairs: Scott Collis, ANL, Argonne, IL and Scott Ellis, NCAR, Boulder, CO

New and Emerging Radar TechnologyLead: Stephen Frasier, University of Massachusetts * Vijay Venkatesh, NASA Goddard * Boon Leng Cheong, University of Oklahoma * Bradley Isom, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory * Eric Loew, NCAR EOL * Jim George, Colorado State University

Radar Networks, Quality Control, Processing and SoftwareLead: Daniel Michelson, Environment Canada * Adrian Loftus, NASA and University of Maryland * Francesc Junyent, Colorado State Univeristy * Hidde Leijnse, Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) * Joseph Hardin, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

Quantitative Precipitation Estimation and HydrologyLead: Walter Petersen, NASA-MSFC * Amber Emory, NASA * David Wolff, NASA * Jian Zhang, NSSL/OU

28 august-1 september 2017 swissôtel ChiCago, il

38th ConferenCe on radar Meteorology

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nMicrophysical Studies with RadarsLead: Christopher Williams, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder * Daniel Dawson, Purdue University * Matthew Kumjian, Pennsylvania State University * Marcus van Lier-Walqui, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies

Organized Convection and Severe PhenomenaLead: Tammy Weckwerth, National Center for Atmospheric Research * Angela Rowe, University of Washington * Karen Kosiba, Center for Severe Weather Research * Kevin Knupp, University of Alabama, Huntsville * Timothy Lang, NASA * Stephen Guidmond, Univ. of Maryland and NASA GSFC

Use of Radar Data for Nowcasting and Numerical ModelsLead: Jenny Sun, NCAR * Curtis Alexander, NOAA * Dustan Wheatley, NSSL * Kao-Shen Chung, National Central University of Taiwan

Moving Platforms. Vehicle, Airborne, Shipborne and SpaceborneLead: Alain Protat, Australian Bureau of Meteorology * Joshua Wurman, Center for Severe Weather Research * Jay Mace, University of Utah * Walter Petersen, NASA-MSFC * Peisang Tsai, National Center on Atmospheric Research * Nick Guy, The Climate Corporation

Cloud Studies Using RadarsLead: Maximilian Maahn, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder * Laura Riihimaki, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory * Mark Kulie, University of Wisconsin * Paloma Borque, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign * Maike Ahlgrimm, European Center For Medium Range Weather Forecasts

Studies of Non-Hydrometeorological ReturnsLead: Virendra Ghate, Argonne National Laboratory * Ya-Chien Fang, McGill University

Geotis Student PrizeLead: Katharina Lengfeld, German Weather Service. * Auguste Gires, Ecole des Ponts ParisTech * Hidde Leijnse, Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI) * Matthew Kumjian, Pennsylvania State University * Marcus van Lier-Walqui, NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies * Markus Peura, Finnish Meteorological Institute * Paloma Borque, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign * Raquel Marques Evaristo, Meteorological Institute, University of Bonn * Richard Ice, NOAA

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AMERICAN METEOROLOGICAL SOCIETY

ConferenCe loCationAll meeting sessions for the conference will be held in the Event Centre at the Swissôtel, 323 E Upper Wacker Dr, Chicago, IL 60601

ConferenCe badges and registrationAll those in attendance of the AMS conference must register and wear the name badge associated with their registration package. Please wear your badge in a viewable spot at all times during the conference. Those wearing a Guest badge are not permitted within any technical session taking place. Anyone wishing to attend technical sessions must register and pay.

The AMS Registration Desk is located in the Monte Rosa Room, located on the 2nd floor or the Event Centre at the Swissôtel Chicago. The AMS Registration Desk will be open for registration on Sunday 27 August from 5:00-7:00pm, and Monday-Thursday during the hours of the conference.

Attendees who have registered for a full week package may attend all conference sessions, exhibits, coffee breaks, poster viewings, Monday evening’s icebreaker and exhibits opening reception, Tuesday evenings’s Tribute Session reception, as well as the Young Scientist Networking Meeting.

Attendees who have registered for a one day package may attend, for one calendar day, admission to all conference sessions, exhibits, coffee breaks, and poster viewing.

ConferenCe eventsIcebreaker and Exhibits Opening ReceptionMonday, 28 August, 5:30-7:30pm, ZurichConnect with colleagues and get your first look at the exhibit hall during the conference’s Icebreaker and Exhibits Opening Reception, sponsored by the exhibiting companies and AMS. Light appetizers will be served and a cash bar will be available.

Tribute to Trailblazers of Radar Meteorology ReceptionTuesday, 29 August, 6-8pm, 2nd Floor FoyerCelebrate the contributions and careers of Dave Atlas, Roger Lhermitte and Edwin Kessler at a reception with light appetizers and a cash bar. One drink ticket will be provided to each attendee thanks to tUniversity of Oklahoma’s College of Geographic and Atmospheric Sci-ence and the National Weather Center

Young Scientist Networking MeetingWednesday, 30 August, 1:30-3:00pm, 2nd Floor FoyerJoin us if you would like to meet other young scientists, if you are wondering how to proceed in your career, how to get a tenure track position, or how to juggle career and family. To answer all your career-related questions, we will have a panel of scientists at various career stages. Coffee and snacks will be provided thanks to METEK.

Chicago Architecture Foundation River Cruise Tour (Separate Ticket)Wednesday, 30 August, 3:30-5:00pmExperience the “top tour in Chicago and one of the top ten tours in the U.S.” according to TripAdvisor users. In 90 minutes, get the real story on Chicago architecture and its history.Attendees who have not already purchased a ticket for this tour may do so at the AMS reg-istration desk (limited number of tickets available). Those that have purchased tickets should arrive at the Southeast corner of the Michigan Avenue Bridge at Wacker Dr (look for the blue awning) by 3:00pm.

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nspeCial needs

It is our sincere desire to comply fully with both the letter and the spirit of the Americanswith Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA). Should you need assistance onsite, please see Meghan Summers at the AMS Registration Desk.

presentation upload informationOnsite, speakers may upload their presentation directly onto the computer in which your presentation is schedule. Presentations can only be uploaded when the room is not being utilized; i.e. coffee/lunch breaks, rooms will also open 30mins prior to the start of session. The use of personal laptops for presentations is discouraged as it can cause technical delays and cut into a presenter’s time.

poster presentationsAll posters will be located in Zurich Room (on the first floor of the event centre at the Swissotel). The poster boards are 4’h x 8’w and sit in a frame that stands about 6ft tall.

Set up and tear down information:Poster Group # Set Up After Formal Poster Viewing Time Tear Down By*Poster Session 1-3 Monday: Noon Monday: 2:30-4pm Tuesday: 11amPoster Session 4-8 Tuesday: Noon Tuesday: 2:30-4pm Wednesday: 11amPoster Session 9-14 Wednesday: 1:30pm Thursday 9:30-11am Thursday: 1:30pm *AMS is not responsible for posters left up after the tear down time.

exhibitsAll exhibits will be located in Zurich Room (on the first floor of the event centre at the Swissotel). We encourage you to visit the exhibut hall during the following hours:Mon., 28 Aug 5:30–7:30 P.M. (Opening Reception/Cash Bar)Tues., 29 Aug. 8:30 A.M.–5:30 P.M.Wed., 30 Aug 9:00 A.M.–12:00P.M.More information on the exhibit program can be found at the end of the program.

beyond the ConferenCeFor local information, please visit the Chicago CVB’s website at https://www.choosechicago.com/.

Local food and drink optionsName: Lobby Lounge of the JW Marriott HotelRecommended by: Scott CollisGood for: Cocktails.Description: Strange that we recommend a hotel lobby bar? I (Scott) often visit this place on my way back to Chicago Union station. Great cocktails! Amazing historic lobby at a fancy hotel. Feel like you are in the 1%.Bookings: Nope.Walking distance: Yes (ish) about one mile. Public transport: Head to Columbus and East Wacker. Take the 20,121, 124 or 151 heading North. Get off at Madison and LaSalle. Contact: http://www.marriott.com/hotels/hotel-information/restaurant/chijw-jw-marriott-chicago/

Name: Italian VillageRecommended by: Scott CollisGood for: Italian food (yep). Description: A village within a building. Three restaurants great italian food!Bookings: Recommended for larger groups. Easy to make onlineWalking distance: Yes (ish) about one mile.

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Public transport:Walk to Wacker & Stetson and take the No. 6 bus towards 79th/South Shore. Get off at State and Monroe. Contact: https://italianvillage-chicago.com

Name: The GaugeRecommended by: Scott CollisGood for: Small groups. Noisy. Great food and craft beer.Description: Historic location with great food, cocktails and beer. Gets noisy but a cozy atmosphere. My favourite is the poutine.Bookings: You can usually fit one or two people in easily at anytime. 4 or more suggest a reservation.Walking distance: Yes, 15 minutesPublic transport: Quicker to walk.Contact: All you need to know here: https://www.thegagechicago.com/

Name: Howell’s and HoodRecommended by: Scott CollisGood for: outdoor dining in an iconic squareDescription: Howells and Hood is a classic American bar/food place. Large menu, not the cheapest but not the most expensive. Right across from the Wrigley building in the middle of a large square and the river. Great outdoor dining area. Very reasonable draft beer list.Bookings: For lunch you should be good. Can get busy for dinner if you have more than 4 people. Walking distance: 8 minutesPublic transport: quicker to walkContact: All you need to know: http://www.howellsandhood.com/Name: Pleasant House PubRecommended by: Scott CollisGood for: Pies (not the Pizza variety.. Meat and other pies.)Description: In Chicago’s Halstead neighbourhood, out of the main loop this is a very cool pub with communal seating and the best pies in Chicago. Great coffee and beer (occasionally they have english beers on cask). Scratch kitchen where they get many ingredients from the urban farm lot next door. Bookings: For lunch you should be good. Can get busy for dinner if you have more than 4 people. Walking distance: NoPublic transport: Take orange line from State/Lake Streets towards HalstedContact: All you need to know: http://www.pleasanthousepub.com/

Name: The BerghoffRecommended by: Scott CollisGood for: Beer and German FoodDescription: One mile from the hotel in the center of town this German pub/beer hall is “Just the right amount of old school”. Nothing fancy at all. Very loud but good fun. Bookings: For lunch you should be good. Can get busy for dinner if you have more than 4 people. Walking distance: Yes (ish). Public transport: Walk to Wacker & Stetson and take the No. 6 bus towards 79th/South Shore. Get off at State and Monroe. Contact: https://www.theberghoff.com/

Name: Revolution Brewing (Logan Square)Recommended by: Bobby JacksonGood for: Beer, foodDescription: In Logan Square, this brewery has all of the Revolution Brewing beers that are made right here in Chicago. I tend to like the Eugene beer.Walking distance: No

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nPublic transport: Take the Blue line to the California stopContact: https://revbrew.com/brewpub/overviewBookings: Can be quite busy Friday and Saturday nights. It is reasonable for a Monday to Thursday evening outing of less than about 6 people, but too far from the conference for lunch. There is also an awesome beercade nearby (Emporium Logan Square) if you want to spend a night gaming.

Name: Lao Sze Chuan or Chinatown in general Recommended by: Virendra GhateGood for: Food (dinner or lunch)Description: If you are a fan of spicy chinese food, this is the restaurant to go to. It is located in the heart of China town. There are about 50 other mostly good chinese restaurants around, so you can just have a Dim Sum if you feel like at some other place. Bookings: Not required. Walking distance: NoPublic transport: Can take the red line train to Cermack China Town stop. There are multiple CTA buses that go from conference center to there. Contact: http://www.chicagolaoszechuan.com/menu.aspx

Activities

What: Andy’s Jazz Club Recommended by: Virendra Ghate Description: Cool spot for listening to nice Jazz/Blues music and have good food. They have a full bar. Gets crowded (loud) at times, so better to make dinner reservations. Contacts: http://www.andysjazzclub.com/

What: Chicago Architecture river cruise Recommended by: Scott Collis Description: Very relaxing cruise along the Chicago river with very knowledgable guides. On board bar helps as well! Note: There is an organized activity for this Wednesday at 3:30pm. Contacts: https://www.architecture.org/experience-caf/tours/detail/chicago-architecture-foundation-river-cruise-aboard-chicagos-first-lady-cruises/

What: Maggie Daley Park Recommended by: Scott CollisDescription: Located due south of the hotel this park includes outdoor rock climbing and a roller skate/blade track. There are also extensive playgrounds for attendees with kids. There is also bike hire on the northern end of the park Contacts: http://maggiedaleypark.com/

What: Navy PierRecommended by: Scott CollisDescription: Originally completed in 1916 as part of Daniel Burnham’s plan for Chicago, Navy Pier is an iconic city landmark inspiring discovery and wonder. Since its reopening in 1995, more than 180 million visitors have come to enjoy the Pier’s 50 acres of unparalleled attractions and experiences. As Navy Pier enters its second century, the venue is evolving into an accessible, year-round centerpiece for Chicago’s diverse arts and cultural treasures. Navy Pier is a one mile walk from the hotel via the chicago riverwalk.Contacts: https://navypier.com/

What: Chicago RiverwalkRecommended by: Scott CollisDescription: The newly created riverwalk is right outside the hotel! This series of riverside paths, boardwalks, historic sites and art installations stays low and close to the river so you pass underneath Chicago’s historic opening bridges.

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Contacts: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicago_Riverwalk

Who is Playing

What: The Cubs are at Home during the Conference!Description: Cubs home games against the Pirates and Braves at Wrigley FIeld (easy access from CTA). 7:05pm start times.Contacts: https://www.mlb.com/cubs/schedule/2017-08

What: The Sox are at home Sunday and FridayDescription: Chicago White Sox (the south side team) are at home Sunday night (Tigers) and Friday Night (Rays). Head South to Guaranteed Rate (yes that is the name) field.Contacts: https://www.mlb.com/whitesox/schedule/2017-08

What: Chicago Bears preseason!Description: Home game at historic Soldier field against the Cleveland Browns, August the 31st at 7pm.Contacts: http://www.chicagobears.com/gameday/schedule.html

professional and respeCtful ConduCt at ams meetings etiquetteAMS is committed to safe and productive meetings for all attendees. Harassment,intimidation, or discrimination of any kind will not be tolerated at any meeting or eventassociated with the meeting. All communication should be appropriate for a professionalaudience including people of many different backgrounds. Those who violate the standardsof professional and respectful conduct may be asked to leave the meeting immediately andwithout refund, may not be considered for service on AMS Boards and Committees, andmay be subject to additional legal action.

Harassment, intimidation, or discrimination includes offensive verbal comments related togender, sexual orientation, disability, physical appearance, body size, race, religion; sexualimages in public spaces; deliberate intimidation, stalking, or following; harassing photographyor recording; sustained disruption of talks or other events; inappropriate physical contact;and unwelcome sexual attention.

This statement is meant to cover all meeting-associated events, including those sponsoredby organizations other than AMS but held in relation to AMS events. This includes thescientific program and exhibitions, as well as receptions, town hall meetings, and otherinformal or formal gatherings associated with AMS.

Any attendee who believes he or she may have witnessed or have been subjected to thatviolates professional and respectful behavior should contact a senior member of the AMSstaff. This may be done by talking with any AMS staff (identified with a staff badge) or bysending an e-mail to or by leaving a message at 617-226-3965 with the appropriate contactinformation. A senior AMS staff member will be in contact in a timely manner. (In the unlikelyevent a reply is not received within 12 hours of sending an e-mail or leaving a voice-mailmessage, follow-up with an AMS staff member at the meeting is advised to ensure thatthe original message has been received.) Anyone witnessing or experiencing behavior thatconstitutes an immediate and serious threat, is advised to call 911 or the local police first.

The AMS takes any breach of professional conduct at an AMS meeting or related functionvery seriously. Attendees are encouraged to report any unprofessional conduct in theknowledge that AMS staff members will do their best to maintain the confidentiality ofall parties to the extent possible while taking appropriate actions. In situations for whichadditional action is warranted, the AMS will cooperate fully with the appropriate authorities.

Page 9: 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology to web.pdfAttendees who have registered for a one day package may attend, for one calendar day, admission to all conference sessions, exhibits,

St. Gallen Vevey

8:00 Opening and Welcome Remarks

8:30 Keynote: Microphysical Studies with Radars

9:00Keynote: Use of Radar Data for Nowcasting and

Numerical Models

9:30Keynote: Moving Platforms. Vehicle, Airborne,

Shipborne and Spaceborne

10:00

Session 5B: Use of Radar Data for Nowcasting

and Numerical Models 1: Radar-Based

Nowcasting

Session 5A: Microphysical Studies With Radars

1: Drop Size Distribution Studies

10:30 5B.1 Zhang, J. 5A.1 Smith, P. L.

10:45 5B.2 French, M. M. 5A.2 Thurai, M.

11:00 5B.3 Schleiss, M. 5A.3 Raupach, T. H.

11:15 5B.4 Han, L. 5A.4 Thompson, R. J.

11:30 5B.5 Wang, Y. 5A.5 Lee, G.

11:45 5B.6 Meyer, T. C. 5A.6 Gatlin, P. N.

12:00

Session 6A: Moving Platforms. Vehicle,

Airborne, Shipborne and Spaceborne 1: Aircraft

Big and Small.

Session 6B: Use of Radar Data for Nowcasting

and Numerical Models 2: Radar-based

nowcasting

1:30 6A.1 Janiszeski, A. 6B.1 Roberts, R.

1:45 6A.2 Jorgensen, D. P. 6B.2 Xin, L.

2:00 6A.3 Didlake, A. C. Jr. 6B.3 Cai, H.

2:15 Ellis, S. 6B.4 Lauridsen, M. J.

2:30

Session 7B: Moving Platforms. Vehicle,

Airborne, Shipborne and Spaceborne 2:

Session 7A: Microphysical Studies with Radars

2: Severe Weather

4:00 7B.1 Li, L. 7A.1 Tanamachi, R.

4:15 7B.2 Iguchi, T. 7A.2 Engel, A. J.

4:30 7B.3 Williams, C. R. 7A.3 van Lier-Walqui, M.

4:45 7B.4 Petersen, W. A. 7A.4 Schmidt, M. B.

5:00 7B.5 Cannon, F. 7A.5 Bozell, J.

5:15 7B.6 Kulie, M. S. 7A.6 Ryzhkov, A. V.

5:30 Icebreaker and Exhibits Opening Reception - Zurich

Monday, 28 August 2017

Coffee Break Sponsored by Metek - 2nd Floor Prefunction Space

Lunch

Formal Poster Viewing and Coffee Break - Zurich DEFG

Page 10: 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology to web.pdfAttendees who have registered for a one day package may attend, for one calendar day, admission to all conference sessions, exhibits,

St. Gallen Vevey

8:00 Keynote: New and Emerging Radar Technology

8:30 Keynote: Cloud Studies Using Radars

9:00Keynote: Organized Convection and Severe

Phenomena

9:30 Introduction to Exhibits

10:00

Session 12A: New and Emerging Radar

Technology 1: Phased Array Weather Radar

Session 12B: Organized Convection and Severe

Phenomena 1: Hurricanes.

10:30 12A.1 Zrnic, D. S. 12B.1 Guimond, S. R.

10:45 12A.2 Leifer, M. C. 12B.2 Adachi, T.

11:00 12A.3 Doviak, R. 12B.3 Alford, A. A.

11:15 12A.4 Pepyne, D. L. 12B.4 Foerster, A. M.

11:30 12A.5 Mirkovic, D. 12B.5 Reed, K. A.

11:45 12A.6 Ushio, T. 12B.6 Cha, T. Y.

12:00

Session 13B: Moving Platforms. Vehicle,

Airborne, Shipborne and Spaceborne 3: Moving

Platforms at Altitude =0.

Session 13A: Use of Radar Data for Nowcasting

and Numerical Models 3: Assimilation Methods

for New Radar Observations

1:30 13B.1 Katsumata, M. 13A.1 Borderies, M.

1:45 13B.2 Thompson, E. J. 13A.2 Carlin, J.

2:00 13B.3 Dolan, B. 13A.3 Martinkus, C.

2:15 13B.4 McCarthy, N. 13A.4 Berne, A.

2:30

Session 15B: New and Emerging Radar

Technology 2: Novel Systems and Measurements

Session 14A: Microphysical Studies with Radars 3:

Ice Scattering

4:00 15B.1 Kawamura, S. 14A.1 Schrom, R. S.

4:15 15B.2 Salazar, J. 14A.2 Jiang, Z.

4:30 15B.3 Orzel, K. 14A.3 Tyynela, J.

4:45 15B.4 Bharadwaj, N. 14A.4 Notaros, B. M.

5:00

Special Session: Tribute to the Trailblazers of

Radar Meteorology: Dave Atlas, Roger Lhermitte

and Edwin Kessler

6:00Tribute to the Trailblazers of Radar Meteorology Reception, sponsored in part by the College of

Atmospheric and Geographic Sciences at the University of Oklahoma

Coffee Break - Zurich

Lunch

Formal Poster Viewing and Coffee Break - Zurich

Tuesday, 29 August 2017

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St. Gallen 1&2 St. Gallen 3 Vevey

8:00

Keynote: Radar Networks,

Quality Control, Processing and

Software

8:30

Keynote: Quantitative

Precipitation Estimation and

Hydrology

Session 18C: Radar Networks,

Quality Control, Processing and

Software 1

Session 18A: Cloud Studies

Using Radars 1

Session 18B: Microphysical

Studies with Radars 4: Ice

Scattering

9:00 18C.1 Collis, S. 18A.1 Schmidt, J. 18B.1 Oue, M.

9:15 18C.2 Lang, T. J. 18A.2 Maahn, M. 18B.2 Adams, I. S.

9:30 18C.3 Hardin, J. C. 18A.3 Luke, E. P. 18B.3 Besic, N.

9:45 18C.4 Bell, M. M. 18A.4 Battaglia, A. 18B.4 Geerts, B.

10:00

Session 19B: Use of Radar Data

for Nowcasting and Numerical

Models 4: Radar Data

Assimilation for NWP

Session 19A: Organized

Convection and Severe

Phenomena 2: General Topics

10:30 19B.1 Gao, J. 19A.1 Lang, T. J.

10:45 19B.2 Alexander, C. 19A.2 Kenyon, A. L.

11:00 19B.3 Pu, Z. 19A.3 Borque, P.

11:15 19B.4 Sun, J. 19A.4 Steiger, S. M.

11:30 19B.5 Augros, C. 19A.5 Kuster, C. M.

11:45 19B.6 Chung, K. S. 19A.6 Skinner, P.

12:00 19B.7 Jacques, D. 19A.7 Nesbitt, S. W.

12:15 19B.8 Tsai, C. C. 19A.8 Mróz, K.

1:30

3:30

Coffee Break - Zurich

Wednesday, 30 August 2017

Young Scientist Networking Meeting Sponsored by Metek - 2nd Floor Foyer

Chicago Architecture Foundation River Cruise Tour (Separate Ticket)

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St. Gallen St. Gallen 1&2 St. Gallen 3 Vevey

Session 20A: New and

Emerging Radar

Technology 3: Innovations

in Signal Processing

Session 20B: Organized

Convection and Severe

Phenomena 4: Tornadoes

8:00 20A.1 Yoshikawa, E. 20B.1 Kosiba, K. A.8:15 20A.2 Mead, J. B. 20B.2 Bodine, D. J.8:30 20A.3 Cho, J. Y. N. 20B.3 Conrad, D. M.8:45 20A.4 Fabry, F. 20B.4 Hulsey, C. B.9:00 20A.5 Kumar, M. 20B.5 Lyza, A. W.9:15 20A.6 Melnikov, V. 20B.6 Bluestein, H. B.

9:30

Session 21C: Studies of Non-

Hydrometeorological

Returns

Session 21A: Cloud Studies

Using Radars 2

Session 21B: Organized

Convection and Severe

Phenomena 3: PECAN

11:00 21C.1 Banghoff, J. R. 21A.1 Ghate, V. 21B.1 Lund, B. M.11:15 21C.2 Fabry, F. 21A.2 Valdivia, J. M. 21B.2 Wilson, J. W.11:30 21C.3 Kennedy, P. C. 21A.3 Vivekanandan, J. 21B.3 Miller, R. L.11:45 21C.4 Vulpiani, G. 21A.4 Ohno, Y. 21B.4 Ziegler, C. L.

12:00

Session 22B: Quantitative

Precipitation Estimation

and Hydrology 1: Multi-

Platform QPE

Session 22A: Microphysical

Studies with Radars 5: Ice

Habit and Hydrometeor ID

Studies

1:30 22B.1 Neely, R. R. III 22A.1 Protat, A.1:45 22B.2 Berenguer, M. 22A.2 Vogel, J. M.2:00 22B.3 Zhang, J. 22A.3 Rowe, A. K.2:15 22B.4 Kirstetter, P. E. 22A.4 Tessendorf, S. A.2:30 22B.5 Petracca, M. 22A.5 Grazioli, J.2:45 22B.6 Kuo, K. S. 22A.6 Pettersen, C.3:00 22B.7 Leijnse, H. 22A.7 Xiao, H.3:15 22B.8 Simpson, M. J. 22A.8 Tiira, J.

3:30

Session 23B: Radar

Networks, Quality Control,

Processing and Software 2

Session 23A: Microphysical

Studies with Radars 6:

Hydrometeor Distribution

Studies

4:00 23B.1 Reinhart, A. E. 23A.1 Liao, L.4:15 23B.2 Wang, H. 23A.2 Hagen, M.4:30 23B.3 Louf, V. 23A.3 Unal, C.4:45 23B.4 Crisologo, I. 23A.4 Tridon, F.5:00 23B.5 Dixon, M. J. 23A.5 Ori, D.5:15 23B.6 Chen, H. 23A.6 Harasti, P. R.

Thursday, 31 August 2017

Formal Poster Viewing and Coffee Break - Zurich DEFG

Lunch

Coffee Break - Zurich DEFG

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St. Gallen Vevey

Session 24A: Quantitative Precipitation

Estimation and Hydrology 2: Improvements and

Application of Radar-Based QPE.

Session 24B: Radar Networks, Quality Control,

Processing and Software 3

8:30 24A.1 Illingworth, A. J. 24B.1 Satoh, S.

8:45 24A.2 Martet, M. 24B.2 Kilambi, A.

9:00 24A.3 Fierce, L. 24B.3 Fox, N. I.

9:15 24A.4 Le Bastard, T. 24B.4 Schneebeli, M.

9:30 24A.5 Park, S. 24B.5 Hubbert, J. C.

9:45 24A.6 Guy, N. 24B.6 Yin, J.

10:00

10:30 Final Annoucements and Award Ceremony

11:30

Coffee Break - 2nd Floor Prefunction Space

Friday, 1 September 2017

Conference Adjounrns

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Foreword 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology 

August 28th – 1st September, 2017 Chicago Illinois, USA 

 On behalf of the American Meteorological Society (AMS) Radar Committee, we welcome you to Chicago, Illinois and to the 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology.  This year we received 464 scientific abstracts representing an astounding volume and diversity of work. The conference is being held in the “Second City” of Chicago on the shores of Lake Michigan. Originally home to the Potawatomi, Miami and Sauk and Fox tribes Chicago’s first non‐indigenous settler was Jean Baptiste Point du Sable who settled in the 1780’s. The city of Chicago was incorporated in 1837 and, due to  its  location  connecting  the Great  lakes  to  the Mississippi,  Chicago was  the  fastest  growing  city  for several  decades  afterwards.  Over  ten  million  people  now  call  greater  Chicago  home.  Chicago  is  an international hub for finance, telecommunications, transportation and industry. And, being home to the University  of  Chicago,  Northwestern  University  and  Argonne  and  Fermi  National  Laboratories  it  is  a hotbed of innovation. It is also, in the view of the conference chairs, one of the most spectacular cities in the world. Burnt to the ground in 1885 Chicago was reborn and ushered in the skyscraper era. Due to much of the old structure being erased Chicago was carefully laid out and designed with careful controls on building design leading to eye pleasing architecture.   This year’s conference has 9 themes organized into 27 oral and 3 poster sessions. Due to the spectacular location of the hotel it was decided to leave some white time open on Wednesday afternoon enabling attendees to explore the city and engage in fruitful collaboration. A special session “A Tribute to the Trailblazers of Radar Meteorology: Dave Atlas, Roger Lhermitte and Edwin Kessler. ” will be held on Tuesday evening. We would like to thank Rit Carbone, Bob Serafin and Dusan Zrnic for their hard work organizing this special event, and the volunteer speakers including Louis Uccellini, Anthony Illingworth, Grant Gray, Pavlos Kollias, Jim Wilson and Howie Bluestein. It has been an honor to work with this remarkably distinguished group. We would also like to thank the University of Oklahoma’s College of Geographic and Atmospheric Science and the National Weather Center for their sponsorship of the event. Our sincere gratitude also goes to the Advanced Radar Research Center for sponsoring coffee during the conference.   The conference is only possible due to the volunteer support of the program committee which is listed on the next pages. We relied heavily on their support and leadership and the topical sessions you will enjoy during the conference are a result of their work. We would like to personally thank them for the support they give to the radar community.   We appreciate the hard work of the AMS specifically Jennifer Ives and Jenn Rosen. We would like to apologize for the many mistakes made and deadlines missed. We would also like to thank Stephanie Armstrong (Sponsorship) and Sotiria Qirjazi (short courses).   Welcome to the Conference and welcome to Chicago! Scott Collis and Scott Ellis Conference co‐chairs 

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RADAR METEOROLOGY CONFERENCE SERIES

DATE LOCATION CONFERENCE NAME March 1947 Cambridge, MA (First) Conference on Radar Meteorology

October 1951 Urbana, IL Second Conference on Radar Meteorology

September 1952 Montreal, PQ, Canada Third International Conference on Radar Meteorology

November 1953 Austin, TX Fourth Conference on Radar Meteorology

12-15September 1955 Asbury Park, NJ Fifth Conference on Radar Meteorology

26-28 March 1957 Cambridge, MA Sixth Conference on Radar Meteorology

17-20 November 1958 Miami Beach, FL Seventh Conference on Radar Meteorology

11-14 April 1960 San Francisco, CA Eighth Conference on Radar Meteorology

23-26 October 1961 Kansas City, MO Ninth Conference on Radar Meteorology

22-25 April 1963 Washington, D.C. 10th Conference on Radar Meteorology

14-18 September 1964 Boulder, CO 11th Conference on Radar Meteorology

17-20 October 1966 Norman, OK 12th Conference on Radar Meteorology

20-23 August 1968 Montreal, PQ, Canada 13th International Conference on Radar Meteorology

17-21 November 1970 Tucson, AZ 14th Conference on Radar Meteorology

10-12 October 1972 Champaign-Urbana, IL 15th Conference on Radar Meteorology

22-24 April 1975 Houston, TX 16th Conference on Radar Meteorology

25-29 October 1976 Seattle, WA 17th Conference on Radar Meteorology

28-31 March 1978 Atlanta, GA 18th Conference on Radar Meteorology

15-18 April 1980 Miami Beach, FL 19th Conference on Radar Meteorology

30 Nov.-3 Dec.1981 Boston, MA 20th Conference on Radar Meteorology

19-23 September 1983 Edmonton, AB, Canada 21st International Conference on Radar Meteorology

10-14 September 1984 Zurich, Switzerland 22nd International Conference on Radar Meteorology

22-26 September 1986 Snowmass, CO 23rd Conference on Radar Meteorology

9-13 November 1987 Boston, MA 24th Conference on Radar Meteorology

24-28 June 1991 Paris, France 25th International Conference on Radar Meteorology

24-28 May 1993 Norman, OK 26th Conference on Radar Meteorology

9-13 October 1995 Vail, CO 27th Conference on Radar Meteorology

7-12 September 1997 Austin, TX 28th Conference on Radar Meteorology

12-16 July 1999 Montreal, PQ, Canada 29th International Conference on Radar Meteorology

19-24 July 2001 Munich, Germany 30th International Conference on Radar Meteorology

6-12 August 2003 Seattle, WA 31st Conference on Radar Meteorology

24–29 October 2005 Albuquerque, NM 32nd Conference on Radar Meteorology

6-10 August 2007 Cairns, Australia 33rd Conference on Radar Meteorology

5-9 October 2009 Williamsburg, VA 34th Conference on Radar Meteorology

26-30 September 2011 Pittsburgh, PA 35th Conference on Radar Meteorology

16-20 September 2013 Breckenridge, CO 36th Conference on Radar Meteorology

14-18 September 2015 Norman, OK 37th Conference on Radar Meteorology

28 August-1 September 2017 Chicago, IL 38th Conference on Radar Meteorology

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Committee on Radar Meteorology

Ali Tokay., Chair

David Bodine, Lawrence Carey, Scott Collis, Scott Ellis, Scott Giangrande, Matthew Kumjian,

Angela Rowe, Robin Tanamachi, Christopher Williams, Amanda Murphy

Program Committee

Scott Collis and Scott Ellis, Co-Chairs

38TH CONFERENCE ON RADAR METEOROLOGY28 Aug.-1 Sept. 2017 Swissotel Chicago Chicago, IL

Sunday, August 275:00 p.m.–7:00 p.m. Registration–Monte Rosa Reg.

Desk

Monday, August 287:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Registration–Monte Rosa Reg.

Desk

10:00 a.m.–10:30 a.m. Coffee Break sponsored byt AARC–2nd Floor Prefunction

12:00 p.m.–1:30 p.m. Lunch Break

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Formal Poster Viewing and Coffee Break–Zurich DEFG

5:30 p.m.–7:30 p.m. Icebreaker and Exhibits Opening Reception–Zurich

8:00 a.m.–8:30 a.m. Plenary Session 1: OPENING REMARKS –VeVey

Speaker(s): Scott Collis, ANL, Argonne, IL, Scott Ellis, NCAR, Boulder, CO, Ali Tokay, Univ. of Maryland, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD

8:30 a.m.–9:00 a.m. Keynote Speaker 2: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS: KEYNOTE –VeVey

8:30 a.m.KS2.1 SnowflakeModelsforIceMicrophysicsRetrievalswithMulti-frequencyRadars. Jussi Leinonen, JPL, Pasadena, CA; S. Brdar, A. Seifert, A. von Lerber, M. Lebsock

9:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m. Keynote Speaker 3: USE OF RADAR DATA FOR NOWCASTING AND NUMERICAL MODELS: KEYNOTE –VeVey

9:00 a.m.KS3.1 DevelopmentofaNewSeamlessPredictionSystemforVeryShortRangeStorm-ScaleForecastingatDWD. Ulrich Blahak, DWD, Offenbach, Germany; R. Potthast, K. Wapler, A. Seifert, A. de Lozar, E. Bauernschuberth, C. Welzbacher, R. Osinski, L. Bach, M. Rempel, M. Hoff, M. Junk

9:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Keynote Speaker 4: MOVING PLATFORMS. VEHICLE, AIRBORNE, SHIPBORNE AND SPACEBORNE: KEYNOTE. –VeVey

9:30 a.m.KS4.1 AProposedSatellitetoProvideGlobalWinds,IceWaterContentandRainfall. Alessandro Battaglia, Univ. of Leicester, Leicester, U.K.; A. J. Illingworth, J. C. Nicol, M. Wolde

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m.

Session 5A: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS 1: DROP SIZE DISTRIBUTION STUDIES –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Christopher R. Williams, CIRES/Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO, Marcus van Lier-Walqui, Univ. of Miami/RSMAS, Miami, FL

10:30 a.m.5A.1 TheEndofN0. Paul L. Smith, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, Rapid CIty, SD

10:45 a.m.5A.2 ApplicationoftheGeneralizedGammaModeltoRepresenttheFullDSDSpectra. Merhala Thurai, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; V. N. Bringi

11:00 a.m.5A.3 EstimationoftheRaindropSizeDistributionfromPolarimetricRadarData:ADouble-MomentNormalizationApproach. Timothy H Raupach, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland; A. Berne

11:15 a.m.5A.4 RadarEstimatesoftheBreadthoftheRaindropSizeSpectra. Robert J. Thompson, Univ. of Reading, Reading, U.K.; A. J. Illingworth

11:30 a.m.5A.5 VariabilityofMicrophysicalCharacteristicsinDifferentClimateRegionandPrecipitationSystem. Gyuwon Lee, Kyungpook National Univ., Daegu, Korea, Republic of (South); S. Kwon, W. Bang, A. V. Ryzhkov, T. J. Schuur

11:45 a.m.5A.6 RadarandDisdrometerObservationsofTopographicalEffectsontheMeltingLayerandResultantRSD. Patrick N. Gatlin, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL; W. A. Petersen, S. M. Wingo, D. B. Wolff

1

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10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 5B: USE OF RADAR DATA FOR NOWCASTING AND NUMERICAL MODELS 1: RADAR-BASED NOWCASTING –St. Gallen

Co-Chair(s): Juanzhen Sun, NCAR, Boulder, CO, Curtis Alexander, NOAA/ESRL/GSD, Boulder, CO

10:30 a.m.5B.1 EvaluationofaRadar-BasedMulti-ScaleStormTrackingTechniqueforVeryShort-TermQPF. Jian Zhang, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; A. P. Osborne, K. W. Howard

10:45 a.m.5B.2 IntercomparisonBetweenPolarimetricRadarandSatelliteIndicatorsofStormSeverityinSupercells. Michael M. French, Stony Brook Univ., Stony Brook, NY; J. C. Snyder

11:00 a.m.5B.3 ProbabilisticRadarNowcastingBasedonTimeNuggets. Marc Schleiss, Delft Univ. of Technology, Delft, Netherlands

11:15 a.m.5B.4 AMachineLearningNowcastingMethodBasedonReal-timeReanalysisData. Lei Han, Ocean Univ. of China, Qingao, China; J. Sun, W. Zhang

11:30 a.m.5B.5 RadarBasedQuantitativePrecipitationNowcastingUsingaNon-steadyRadarExtrapolationScheme. Yadong Wang, Southern Illinois Univ., Edwardsville, IL; J. Zhang

11:45 a.m.5B.6 UsingRandomForesttoGenerateProbabilityofCloud-to-Ground. Tiffany C. Meyer, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; K. M. Calhoun, D. M. Kingfield, C. Karstens

1:30 p.m.–2:30 p.m. Session 6A: MOVING PLATFORMS. VEHICLE, AIRBORNE, SHIPBORNE AND SPACEBORNE 1: AIRCRAFT BIG AND SMALL. –St. Gallen

Co-Chair(s): Peisang Tsai, NCAR, Boulder, CO, Nick Guy, The Climate Corporation, Seattle, WA

1:30 p.m.6A.1 Fine-scaleStructureofthe2-3February2015Nor’easterUsingHigh-ResolutionHIAPERCloudRadarObservations. Andrew Janiszeski, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; R. M. Rauber, G. McFarquhar, B. Jewett, S. Ellis

1:45 p.m.6A.2 ImprovementstotheNOAAP-3AirborneDopplerTail-MountedRadar:SuperCellObservationsfromVORTEX-Southeast. David P. Jorgensen, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; C. L. Ziegler, E. N. Rasmussen, A. S. Goldstein

2:00 p.m.6A.3 AnalyzingtheTransitionfromRainbandstoaSecondaryEyewallUsingAirborneRadarObservationsofHurricaneEarl(2010). Anthony C. Didlake, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; P. Reasor, R. F. Rogers

6A.4 WITHDRAWN

1:30 p.m.–2:30 p.m. Session 6B: USE OF RADAR DATA FOR NOWCASTING AND NUMERICAL MODELS 2: RADAR-BASED NOWCASTING –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Juanzhen Sun, NCAR, Boulder, CO, Curtis Alexander, NOAA/ESRL/GSD, Boulder, CO

1:30 p.m.6B.1 AReal-TimeHydrometeorologyResearchTestbedforHeavyRainfallandStreamflowPrediction. Rita Roberts, NCAR/RAL, Boulder, CO; J. Wilson, D. Megenhardt, J. Sun, D. Gochis, A. Rafieeinasab, B. Brown

1:45 p.m.6B.2 EvaluationofNCAR’sAutoNowCasterforOperationalApplicationwithintheNationalWeatherService. Lingyan Xin, NOAA/NWS/STI, Silver Spring, MD; M. B. Ba, J. Crockett, S. Smith

2:00 p.m.6B.3 DevelopingaWRF-BasedMixedVariationalandNudgingDataAssimilationSchemefortheUSArmyConvective-ScaleNowcastingSystem. Huaqing Cai, U.S. Army Research Laboratory, White Sands Missile Range, NM; R. E. Dumais Jr., B. P. Reen, Y. Xie, S. Albers, H. Jiang

2:15 p.m.6B.4 ExploitingShipborneRadarforShip-FollowingCOAMPSRapidEnvironmentalAssessment. Matthew J. Lauridsen, FNMOC, Monterey, CA; T. J. Neu, C. E. Skupniewicz, D. Geiszler, P. R. Harasti, Q. Zhao, D. Martinez

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Poster Session 1: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS: POSTERS 1. –Zurich DeFG

Organizer(s): Christopher R. Williams, CIRES/Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO, Daniel T. Dawson, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN

1 FineStructuresofCloudsandPrecipitationsObservedwithW-bandRadarsFALCON-IandFALCON-A. Toshiaki Takano, Chiba Univ., Chiba, Japan; Y. Kawamura, K. Morikawa, Y. Suzuki, A. Mizuta, K. Koike, H. Nakata

2 TowardsaBetterUseofPolarimetricObservationsofFrozenandFreezingPrecipitationswithApplicationtoAircraftIcingDetection. Clotilde Augros, Météo France, Toulouse, France; M. Lecocq, N. Yu, N. Gaussiat

3 EstimationofLiquidWaterPathinStratiformPrecipitationSystemusingMWRandRadarMeasurements. Jingjing Tian, Univ. of Arizona, Tucson, AZ; X. Dong, B. Xi, C. R. Williams

4 TowardaSpace-BorneRadarClassificationSchemeforCoalescenceDominantPrecipitation. Leonardo Porcacchia, George Mason Univ., Fairfax, VA; P. E. Kirstetter, V. Maggioni, S. Tanelli, F. J. Turk, S. Kacimi, Z. S. Haddad

5 ClimatologyoftheVerticalProfilesofPolarimetricRadarVariablesatXBandinStratiformClouds. Silke Troemel, Meteorological Institute, Univ. of Bonn, Bonn, Germany; A. Ryzhkov, C. Simmer

2

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6 InitialPerformanceEvaluationofaRadar-BasedSuper-CooledWaterDetectionAlgorithmduringtheSNOWIEFieldCampaign. David J. Serke, NCAR, Boulder, CO; S. Tessendorf, K. A. Reed, J. R. French, B. Geerts, D. M. Plummer, S. Faber, R. T. Bruintjes, R. M. Rauber, K. Friedrich, R. M. Rasmussen, A. R. Janiszeski, L. Blanchette, A. Schweitzer, S. Huber, S. W. Chen, R. Gutierrez, D. Blestrud, M. L. Kunkel, J. A. Haggerty, D. Albo

7 HydrometeorCharacterizationofLightningRegionsRelativetoDowndraftProcesses. Sarah M. Stough, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; L. D. Carey, C. J. Schultz, D. J. Cecil

8 APolarimetricAnalysisofIceMicrophysicalProcessesinSnow,usingQuasi-VertialProfiles. Erica M. Griffin, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK

9 OrographicRainfallStudieswithDisdrometerandRadarObservationsintheSouthernKoreanPeninsuladuringSummerin2015-2017. Dong-In Lee, Pukyong National Univ., Busan, Korea, Republic of (South); D. K. Kim, Y. Kang, H. J. Kim

10 UsingRadarDatatoEvaluatetheVariabilityofMass-DimensionParametersWithinIceClouds. Joseph A. Finlon, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; G. M. McFarquhar, R. M. Rauber, S. W. Nesbitt, W. Wu, M. R. Poellot

11 ChangeFeaturesofCloudMicrophysicalStructureofSevereConvectiveStormCloudsByPolarimetricRadarObservation. Hui Xiao, Institute of Atmospheric Physics(IAP),Chinese Academy of Sciences(CAS), Beijing, China; Y. Sun, H. L. Yang, G. Wen, L. Feng

12 OverviewofPurdue’sMobileDisdrometerOperationsDuringVORTEX-SE2016-2017. Daniel T. Dawson, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN; M. E. Baldwin, J. Bozell, J. Buckingham, D. R. Chavas, W. L. Downing, M. Guo, R. Tanamachi, A. N. Griffin, H. M. Mallinson, S. J. Frasier, W. Heberling, J. Waldinger, M. I. Biggerstaff, S. Waugh

13 PolarimetricRadarRelationsforSnowEstimationBasedonDisdrometerData. Petar Bukovcic, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, NOAA/OAR NSSL, Norman, OK; A. Ryzhkov, D. S. Zrnic, G. Zhang

14 PolarimetricCharacteristicsandMicrophysicalStructureofaFreezingRainandIcePelletEventintheKantoAreaon29January2016. Nobuhiro Nagumo, MRI, Tsukuba, Japan; A. Adachi, H. Yamauchi

15 PolarimetricRadarBasedRetrievalsofIceHydrometeorShapesandIntercomparisonsbetweenRetrievalsandinSituResults. Sergey Y. Matrosov, CIRES/NOAA/ESRL, Boulder, CO; C. G. Schmitt, M. Maahn, G. de Boer

16 MicrophysicalAnalysisofaQuasi-LinearConvectiveSystem–APECANCaseStudy20June2015. Angelica Marchi, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; D. M. Stechman, R. M. Rauber, G. M. McFarquhar, B. F. Jewett, M. M. Bell

17 EvolutionofMicrophysicalStructureofaSubtropicalSquallLineObservedbyaPolarimetricRadarandaDisdrometerduringOPACCinEasternChina. Kun Zhao, Nanjing Univ., Nanjing, China; J. Wen, G. Zhang, W. Lee

18 CharacterizationofSnowfallPropertiesatHighLatitudeSitesthroughCoincidentRadar,Snowflake,andFallspeedObservations. Steven J. Cooper, Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; C. Pettersen, N. B. Wood, M. Wolff, T. L’Ecuyer, W. A. Petersen, L. F. Bliven

19 VerificationoftheTriple-FrequencyRetrievalofSnowfallPropertiesusingCoincidentAirborneObservationsCollectedduringOLYMPEX. Randy J. Chase, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; G. M. McFarquhar, S. W. Nesbitt, P. Borque, J. A. Finlon, M. R. Poellot, S. Tanelli

20 Super-CooledLargeDropDetectionwithPrecipitationRadarsfortheEnhancementofOperationalIcingProducts. David J. Serke, NCAR, Boulder, CO; D. R. Adriaansen, S. Tessendorf, J. A. Haggerty, D. Albo, G. Cunning

21 ConceptoftheJOYCECoreFacility. Josephin Beer, Meteorological Institute Univ. of Bonn, Bonn, Germany; B. Pospichal, S. Trömel, U. Löhnert, C. Simmer, S. Crewell

22 MicrophysicalParametersRetrievalofRainfallUsingKaBandRadarProfileratCentralAndesofPeru. Jairo M. Valdivia, Geophysical Institute of Peru, Lima, Peru; Y. Silva, D. E. Scipion

23 PrecipitationCharacteristicsovertheMid-LatitudeOceanswith3YearsofGPMDPRData. Mei Han, GESTAR/Morgan State Univ., Greenbelt, MD; S. A. Braun

24 TestingtheDSD-BasedStratiform-ConvectiveRainSeparationforTenEventsinGreeley,Colorado. Merhala Thurai, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; P. Kennedy, B. Dolan, V. N. Bringi

25 Identifying,Observing,andForecastingThunderstormsProducingDeepSurfaceHailAccumulations. Robinson Wallace, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO; K. Friedrich, E. A. Kalina, B. Meier, N. Rydell, W. Deierling, P. T. Schlatter, B. C. Motta

26 DistrometricDropSizeDistributioninSouthBrazil:DerivedZ-RRelationshipsandComparisonswithRadarMeasurements. Roberto V. Calheiros, SIMEPAR - Parana Meteorological System, Curitiba, Brazil; C. Oliveira, C. Beneti, L. Calvetti

27 EvaluationoftheGPMSchemeforHandlingDropSizeDistributions. Paul L. Smith, South Dakota School of Mines and Technology, Rapid CIty, SD; R. W. Johnson, D. V. Kliche

28 ABayesianHydrometeorClassificationAlgorithmforC-BandPolarimetricRADAR. Ji Yang, Nanjing Univ., Nanjing, China

29 AnInvestigationIntotheStorm-LocatedLightningChannelsandLNOxProductionDuringDC3. Trenton Davis, Colorado State Univ., Ft. Collins, CO; S. A. Rutledge, B. Fuchs, B. Basarab, B. Dolan

30 MieScatteringDetectionUsingtheCSU-CHILLDual-WavelengthDual-PolarizationRadar. Francesc Junyent, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; P. C. Kennedy, V. Chandrasekar

31 AStudyonVariabilityofZDRandKDPMaximaAccordingtoMicrophysicalProcessesthroughDual-PolarizationRadarandDistrometersObservation. GyuWon Lee, Kyungpook National Univ., Daegu, Korea, Republic of (South); W. Bang, K. Kim, G. J. Huang, M. Thurai, P. Kennedy, V. N. Bringi, B. Notaroš

32 CalibratingtheAirborneKa-BandPrecipitationRadarAboardtheUniv.ofWyomingKingAirResearchAircraft. Adam W. Tripp, Univ. of Wyoming, Laramie, WY; S. J. Haimov, A. L. Pazmany, B. Geerts, J. French

3

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2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Poster Session 2: MOVING PLATFORMS. VEHICLE, AIRBORNE, SHIPBORNE AND SPACEBORNE: POSTERS 1. –Zurich DeFG

33 EstimatesofPathAttenuationfromSpace-borneRadarsusingNormalizedSurfaceCrossSectionData. Hyokyung Kim, Goddard Earth Sciences Technology and Research/Morgan State Univ., Greenbelt, MD; R. Meneghini

34 DetectionofHeavyIcePrecipitationwithGPM/DPR. Toshio Iguchi, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Koganei, Japan; N. Kawamoto, R. Oki

35 AMethodtoLocateAirborneRadarObservationData. Shubei Wang, Chengdu Univ. of Information Technology, Chengdu, China; Z. Yao

36 StatisticalMethodsforSpace-timeAveragedRainRateEstimationAppliedtotheDual-FrequencyPrecipitationRadar. Robert Meneghini, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD; H. Kim, L. Liao

37 CalibrationoftheGPM/DPR. Takeshi Masaki, Remote Sensing Technology Center of Japan, Tsukuba, Japan; T. Iguchi, K. Furukawa, N. Yoshida, K. Kanemaru, H. Hanado, T. Kubota, R. Oki

38 AMulti-Radar,Multi-PlatformInvestigationoftheInnerCoreofHurricaneMatthew(2016). Stephen R. Guimond, NASA and UMD/ESSIC, Greenbelt, MD; M. McLinden, G. M. Heymsfield, A. E. Emory, A. C. Didlake Jr.

39 IncidentAngleDependencyoftheNormalizedSurfaceCrossSectionduringTRMMEndofMissionExperiment. Nobuhiro Takahashi, Institute for Space-Earth Environmental Research, Nagoya Univ., Nagoya, Japan

40 GPMDual-frequencyPrecipitationRadarintheSwissAlps. Alexis Berne, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland; P. J. Speirs, M. Gabella

41 RetrievalofRaindropSizeDistributionParametersfromDual-PolarizationRadarMeasurements. Leo Pio D’Adderio, Univ. of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy; A. Tokay, D. A. Marks, J. L. Pippitt, D. B. Wolff, W. A. Petersen

42 ImplementationofPolarizationDiversityPulsePairModeontheNRCAirborneW-bandRadar. Mengistu Wolde, National Research Council, Ottawa, ON, Canada; C. Nguyen, A. L. Pazmany, A. J. Illingworth, A. Battaglia, R. Midthassel

43 GroundTestResultsofEarthCARECloudProfilingRadar. Yuichi Ohno, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Koganei, Japan; H. Horie, H. Nakatsuka, Y. Aida, Y. Seki, K. Okada, K. Maruyama, N. Tomiyama, E. Tomita

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Poster Session 3: USE OF RADAR DATA FOR NOWCASTING AND NUMERICAL MODELS: POSTERS. –Zurich DeFG

44 AdditionalEnsemblePerturbationstoCorrecttheAtmosphericFieldthroughAssimilationofRadarReflectivity. Sho Yokota, MRI, Tsukuba, Japan; H. Seko, M. Kunii, H. Yamauchi, E. Sato

45 ValidationofElectromagneticWindRadarSimulatorBasedonLESwithScanningX-bandRadarMeasurementsandMeteorologicalData. Dmitry A. Kovalev, Université Catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium; D. Vanhoenacker-Janvier

46 AnIterativeMethodforAssimilatingPrecipitationObservations. Andrés A. Pérez Hortal, McGill Univ., Montreal, QC, Canada; I. Zawadzki, M. K. Yau

47 TheImpactofRadarDataAssimilationforSimulateaSupercellinBrazilSouthern. Otavio Feitosa, Universidade Federal de Pelotas, Capão do Leão - RS, Brazil; L. Calvetti, F. Harter, G. Cassol Machado, R. Toshio, B. B. Maske, C. Beneti

48 ComparisonofMulti-ModelMicrophysicsSchemesusingRadarObservationsandDataAssimilationMethod. Ki-Hong Min, Kyungpook National Univ., Daegu, Korea, Republic of (South); S. Mallick, J. C. Ha, J. Lee, J. Lee, J. Bae

49 AssessingEstimatesofLow-LevelSupercellCirculationandArealExpansionRateDiagnosedfromDopplerRadarData:SimulationStudy. Vincent T. Wood, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; R. P. Davies-Jones, C. K. Potvin

50 Radar-DrivenTemperatureNudgingforNowcastingWinterPrecipitation. Brandon S Hickman, Univ. of Bonn, Bonn, Germany; S. Trömel, A. Ryzhkov, C. Simmer

51 CombinedDual-DopplerandPolarimetricAnalysisofPrecipitatingCellsfrom2X-BandPolarimetricRadars. Raquel M. Evaristo, Univ. of Bonn, Bonn, Germany; K. Mühlbauer, S. Troemel, C. Simmer

52 Retrieving2DWindFieldfromAliasedDopplerDatabyMeansofSlidingWindows. Markus Peura, Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland

53 SimulatingaPrecipitationRadarOnboardaGeostationarySatellite. Atsushi Okazaki, RIKEN, Kobe, Japan; T. Honda, S. Kotsuki, M. Yamaji, T. Kubota, R. Oki, T. Iguchi, T. Miyoshi

54 ANewScanModetoIncreaseClear-AirDataCoverageforWindAnalysis. Qin Xu, NSSL, Norman, OK; K. Nai, V. Melnikov

55 CombiningPolarimetricRadarDataandHRRRModelOutputtoDetermineMeltingLayerCoverageandSurface-BasedPrecipitationTypesinWinterStorms:NewAlgorithmsfortheWSR-88D. Terry J. Schuur, CIMMS, Norman, OK; J. Krause, A. V. Ryzhkov

56 UsingRadarMeasuredSpectrumWidthtoEstimateLargeScaleBackgroundWindShearIntensity. Ming Fang, Univ. of Miami/RSMAS, Miami, FL; B. A. Albrecht

57 ComparisonofAssimilationExperimentsBeforeandAfterCorrectionofWeatherRadarReflectivityDatainNumericalModelARPS. Jing Han, Nanjing Univ. of Information Science & Technology, Nanjing, China; H. Zhang, Z. Wang, Z. Chu, F. Xu

58 Value-AddedWeatherRadarProductsforDecisionSupport. Robert J. Dreisewerd, Baron Services, Inc., Huntsville, AL

59 SimulatedPolarimetricRadarFingerprintsofIceGrowthinArcticMixed-PhaseClouds. Robert S. Schrom, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; J. Y. Harrington, M. R. Kumjian

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60 NowcastingByBlendingTechniquesUsingCosineSimilarityandLeadTimeCorrection. Min Jang, Hankuk Univ. of Foreign Studies, Yongin-si, Gyeonggi-do, Korea, Republic of (South); C. H. You, J. B. Jee, D. I. Lee

61 QuantifyingtheLatencywithinMosaickedRadarProductsandAssessingImpactsonOperations. Heather D. Reeves, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; L. Tang, J. Zhang, J. Brogden, K. Howard

62 AStudyonNowcastingUsingaPyramidalOpticalFlow. Limtak Yu, Pukyong National Univ., Busan, Korea, Republic of (South); D. Lee, J. H. Kim, J. H. Jeong

63 PNOWWA-ProbabilisticNowcastingofWinterWeatherforAirports. Rudolf Kaltenboeck, Austro Control, Innsbruck, Austria; A. M. Harri, M. Hagen, H. Haukka, H. Hohti, H. Juntti, J. Koistinen, A. Lehkonen, L. Neitiniemi-Upola, J. Nuottokari, K. Österberg, M. Peura, S. Pulkkinen, T. Riihisaari, E. Saltikoff, A. von Lerber

64 TheAustralianVHFWindProfilerNetworkOperationandImpactsonGlobalNumericalWeatherPrediction. Bronwyn K. Dolman, ATRAD Pty Ltd., Thebarton, Australia; C. Tingwell, I. M. Reid, M. Hervo

65 ExperimentalStudyonBoundaryConditionsandWeightingFactorsofRadar-BasedNowcastingSystem:MAPLE. Jong-Hoon Jeong, KMA, Seoul, Korea, Republic of (South); S. H. Jung, M. K. Suk, S. K. Lee

66 SensitivityTestsofAssimilatingThermodynamicVariableswithRadarObservationsintheEnsembleKalmanFilterSystem. Ching-Yin Ke, National Central Univ., Jhongli City, Taiwan; K. S. Chung

67 EvaluationoftheMicrophysicsofPrecipitationwithMultifrequencyRadarObservations(EMPORiuM). Frederic Tridon, Univ. of Leicester, Leicester, U.K.; C. Planche, S. Banson, K. Mróz, A. Battaglia, W. Wobrock, M. Monier, J. Van Baelen

68 EstimatingConvectiveStormTurbulencewithRadartoEvaluatetheParamerisationofTurbulenceinNWPModels. Matthew Marcus Feist, Univ. of Reading, Reading, U.K.; C. D. Westbrook, P. Clark, T. Stein, H. W. Lean, A. Stirling

69 CloudRadarConstrainedEstimatesofBulkEntrainmentRateforEvaluationofLarge-EddySimulations. Michael Jensen, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY; T. Toto, S. Endo, A. M. Vogelmann

70 StepsTowardsIngestingRadarEstimatedRefractivityIntoNumericalWeatherPredictionModels. Ya-Chien Feng, McGill Univ., Montreal, QC, Canada; F. Fabry

71 MultipleRadarDataAssimilationandShort-RangePrecipitationForecastofaColdFront. Rute Ferreira, INPE, Cachoeira Paulista, Brazil; T. Biscaro, M. P. Alves Jr, L. E. R. Zea, D. L. Herdies, E. P. Vendrasco

72 DiurnalCycleofPrecipitationandWindsOvertheHuancayoObservatory(CentralPeruvianAndes),UsingaKaBandCloud-profilingRadar(MIRA35C)andBoundaryLayerTroposphericRadar(BLTR). Yamina Silva, Instituto Geofisico del Peru, Lima, Peru; S. P. Chavez, E. Villalobos, D. E. Scipion

73 UseofRadarDataintheNSSLExperimentalWarn-on-ForecastSystemforEnsembles. Dustan M. Wheatley, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; K. H. Knopfmeier, P. S. Skinner, T. A. Jones, J. J. Choate, L. J. Wicker, D. C. Dowell, T. Ladwig

74 ComparisonofSimulatedPolarimetricSignaturesinaSquallLineCaseoverSouthChinaUsingTwo-MomentBulkMicrophysicsSchemesinWRF. Gang Chen, Nanjing Univsersity, Nanjing, China; K. Zhao, G. Zhang

75 RadarRainfallNowcastingModelsUsingMovingMotionVectors. GyuWon Lee, Kyungpook National Univ., Daegu, Korea, Republic of (South); S. Ryu, G. Lyu

76 AnObject-basedAssessmentoftheImpactsofRadarDataAssimilationintheCommunityLeveragedUnifiedEnsemble. Patrick S. Skinner, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; T. L. Jensen, R. Bullock, J. H. Gotway, A. Clark, M. Xue

77 ImprovementsofFogNow-CastingbyCloudRadarMeasurementsontheMunichAirport. Matthias Richard Bauer-Pfundstein, METEK, Meteorologische Messtechnik GmbH, Elmshorn, Germany; B. R. Beckmann, R. Eigenmann

78 UsingRadarDataAssimilationtoImproveShort-rangePrecipitationForecasts. Eder P. Vendrasco, Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais, Cachoeira Paulista, Brazil; L. F. Sapucci, L. A. T. Machado, R. V. Andreoli, T. S. Biscaro, I. C. Costa

4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m. Session 7A: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS 2: SEVERE WEATHER –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Matthew R. Kumjian, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK , Daniel T. Dawson, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN

4:00 p.m.7A.1 Purdue-UMassMobileRadarObservationsfromVORTEX-SE2017. Robin Tanamachi, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN; S. J. Frasier, W. Heberling, J. Waldinger, T. Hartley, A. T. LaFleur, P. E. Saunders

4:15 p.m.7A.2 SpatiotemporalVariabilityofZDRColumnArealandAltitudinalExtentinTornadicandNontornadicSupercells. Adrianne J. Engel, Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE; M. S. Van Den Broeke

4:30 p.m.7A.3 TrackingtheEvolutionofRadarPolarimetricSignaturesovertheLifecycleofIsolatedConvectiveCells:AFour-YearClimatologyintheHoustonRegion. Marcus van Lier-Walqui, Columbia Univ. & NASA/GISS, New York, NY; S. Collis, M. H. Picel, A. M. Fridlind, R. E. Orville, R. Weitz

4:45 p.m.7A.4 SevereHailDetection:AnAdaptiveAlgorithmforAnomalousAttenuationCorrectionandNewInsightsfromScatteringSimulationsatC-band. Matthias B. Schmidt, Univ. of Bonn, Bonn, Germany; S. Trömel, A. V. Ryzhkov, C. Simmer

5:00 p.m.7A.5 ComparingDisdrometerMeasuredRaindropSizeDistributionsfromVORTEX-SEwithDistributionsfromPolarimetricRadarRetrievalsUsingtheConstrainedGammaMethod. Jessica Bozell, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN; D. T. Dawson II, R. Tanamachi, S. Frasier

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5:15 p.m.7A.6 NovelApproachesforStudyingIceMicrophysicsinStratiformCloudswithDual-PolarizationRadars. Alexander V. Ryzhkov, Univ. of Oklahoma/CIMMS, Norman, OK; T. J. Schuur, P. Zhang, E. M. Griffin, P. Bukovcic, A. M. Murphy, D. S. Zrnic

4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m. Session 7B: MOVING PLATFORMS. VEHICLE, AIRBORNE, SHIPBORNE AND SPACEBORNE 2: SATELLITE. –St. Gallen

Co-Chair(s): Walter A. Petersen, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL, Brenda Dolan, Atmospheric Science, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO

4:00 p.m.7B.1 CloudandPrecipitationImagingRadarTechnologyDevelopmentforFutureSpaceborneMissions. Lihua Li, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD; G. Heymsfield, P. Racette, M. McLinden, M. E. Cooley, P. A. Stenger, T. Spence

4:15 p.m.7B.2 PerformanceoftheNewVersionoftheGPM/DPRRainRetrievalAlgorithm. Toshio Iguchi, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Koganei, Japan; S. Seto, R. Meneghini, T. Masaki, N. Yoshida, J. Awaka, M. Le, V. Chandasekar, J. Kwiatkowski, T. Kubota

4:30 p.m.7B.3 PrecipitationVariabilityAcrossSatelliteField-of-ViewsDerivedfromGround-BasedPolarimetricScanningRadarObservations. Christopher R. Williams, CIRES/Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO; W. A. Petersen, D. B. Wolff, V. Chandrasekar

4:45 p.m.7B.4 PolarimetricRadarVerificationofGPMSatellite-BasedRetrievalsoftheRaindropSizeDistribution. Walter A. Petersen, NASA, Huntsville, AL; A. Tokay, K. R. Morris, L. P. D’Adderio, D. B. Wolff, P. N. Gatlin

5:00 p.m.7B.5 SatelliteRadarMeasurementsofPrecipitationandFreezingLevelinAtmosphericRivers. Forest Cannon, SIO, La Jolla, CA; F. M. Ralph, A. M. Wilson, D. P. Lettenmaier

5:15 p.m.7B.6 SeasonalVariabilityofShallowCumuliformSnowfall:ACloudSatPerspective. Mark S. Kulie, Michigan Technological Univ., Houghton, MI; L. Milani

Tuesday, August 297:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Registration–Monte Rosa Reg.

Desk

8:30 a.m.–5:30 p.m. Exhibits Open–Zurich

10:00 a.m.–10:30 a.m. Coffee Break–Zurich

12:00 p.m.–1:30 p.m. Lunch Break

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Formal Poster Viewing and Coffee Break–Zurich

6:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m. Tribute to the Trailblazers of Radar Meteorology Reception sponsored in part by University of Oklahoma’s College of Geo-graphic and Atmospheric Science and the National Weather Center

8:00 a.m.–8:30 a.m. Keynote Speaker 8: NEW AND EMERGING RADAR TECHNOLOGY: KEYNOTE –VeVey

8:00 a.m.KS8.1 AssessingtheWeatherObservationCapabilitiesofaSpectrumEfficientNationalSurveillanceRadar(SENSR). Mark E. Weber, CIMMS, Norman, OK; I. Ivic, F. Nai, T. J. Schuur, D. Schvartzman, S. Torres, D. J. Wasielewski, N. Yussouf, A. Zahrai, R. J. Doviak, P. L. Heinselman, K. D. Hondl, L. J. Wicker, D. S. Zrnic, C. Fulton, R. D. Palmer, J. Salazar, G. Zhang, Y. Zhang, Y. Jung, M. Xue, X. Wang, J. Y. N. Cho, D. Conway, J. M. Kurdzo, H. Thomas, T. Wallace

8:30 a.m.–9:00 a.m. Keynote Speaker 9: CLOUD STUDIES USING RADARS: KEYNOTE. –VeVey

8:30 a.m.KS9.1 IdentifyingMixed-PhaseConditionsinDeepConvectiveCloudswithCollocatedARMVerticallyPointingActiveSensors. Laura D. Riihimaki, PNNL, Richland, WA; N. Bharadwaj, J. Comstock, X. Dong, Z. Feng, Q. Fu, S. E. Giangrande, J. C. Hardin, E. P. Luke, A. A. Matthews, T. Thorsen, J. Tian, J. Wang

9:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m. Keynote Speaker 10: ORGANIZED CONVECTION AND SEVERE PHENOMENA: KEYNOTE. –VeVey

9:00 a.m.KS10.1CorrelationsbetweenTopographyandLandCoverwithTornadoIntensityusingRapid-ScanMobileandWSR-88DRadarObservationsinaGeographicInformationSystemFramework. Jana B. Houser, Ohio Univ., Athens, OH; K. M. Butler, N. McGinnis

9:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Plenary Session 11: INTRODUCTION TO EXHIBITS –VeVey

9:30 a.m.11.1 Baron

9:35 a.m.11.2 EEC

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9:40 a.m.11.3 EWRWeatherRadarSystemsInc.

9:45 a.m.11.4 FurunoGPS/GNSS

9:50 a.m.11.5 SelexESGmbH

9:55 a.m.11.6 Vaisala

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 12A: NEW AND EMERGING RADAR TECHNOLOGY 1: PHASED ARRAY WEATHER RADAR –St. Gallen

Co-Chair(s): Stephen Frasier, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA and Jorge Salazar, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK

10:30 a.m.12A.1 PopagationandBackscatteringChallengesforPlanarPolarimetricPhasedArrayRadars. Dusan S. Zrnic, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; R. J. Doviak, G. Zhang, Y. Zhang, C. Fulton

10:45 a.m.12A.2 IntegratedSidelobeLevelOptimizationfortheAirbornePhasedArrayRadar(APAR). Mark C. Leifer, Ball Aerospace, Westminster, CO; R. Haupt

11:00 a.m.12A.3 WeatherandAircraftSurveillanceRadarRequirementsfora10-cmWavelengthMulti-functionPhasedArrayRadar. Richard Doviak, NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; M. E. Weber, D. S. Zrnic

11:15 a.m.12A.4 MultilagEstimatorsfortheAlternatingModeofDual-PolarimetricWeatherRadarOperation. David L. Pepyne, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA

11:30 a.m.12A.5 FullWaveElectromagneticapproachtotheCalibrationofPolarimetricPhasedArrayRadars. Djordje Mirkovic, NOAA, Norman, OK; D. S. Zrnic

11:45 a.m.12A.6 OsakaUrbanPhasedArrayRadarNetworkExperiment. Tomoo Ushio, Tokyo Metropolitan Univ., Hino, Tokyo, Japan; H. Kikuchi, T. Mega, F. Mizutani, M. Wada

10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 12B: ORGANIZED CONVECTION AND SEVERE PHENOMENA 1: HURRICANES. –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Wen-Chau Lee, NCAR, Boulder, CO, Chris Vagasky, Vaisala Inc, Louisville, CO

10:30 a.m.12B.1 NOVELRADARObservationsofTurbulentEddiesintheLowerLevelsofIntenseHurricaneRITA(2005). Stephen R. Guimond, Univ. of Maryland, College Park, MD; S. J. Frasier, J. A. Zhang, J. Sapp

10:45 a.m.12B.2 Three-DimensionalStructureofTyphoonMindulle(2016)andNear-SurfaceStreaksObservedByPhasedArrayRadar. Toru Adachi, MRI, Tsukuba, Japan; K. Kusunoki, U. Shimada, J. Ito

11:00 a.m.12B.3 MobileRadarObservationsoftheKinematicsandMicrophysicsofHurricanesIsaac(2013)andHermine(2016). A. Addison Alford, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; M. I. Biggerstaff

11:15 a.m.12B.4 RetrievedThermodynamicStructureofHurricaneRita(2005)fromAirborneMulti-DopplerData. Annette M. Foerster, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; M. M. Bell

11:30 a.m.12B.5 AUniqueLookintoHurricaneMatthew:High-ResolutionWindandPrecipitationObservationsUsingtheNASATroposphericDopplerRadarWindProfilerandOtherMulti-FrequencyWeatherSurveillanceRadars. Kimberly A. Reed, Radiometrics Corporation, Boulder, CO; T. Wilfong, L. L. Huddleston, T. Brauer

11:45 a.m.12B.6 EyewallReplacementCycleofHurricaneMatthew(2016)ObservedbySingle-DopplerRadar. Ting-Yu Cha, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; M. M. Bell

1:30 p.m.–2:30 p.m. Session 13A: USE OF RADAR DATA FOR NOWCASTING AND NUMERICAL MODELS 3: ASSIMILATION METHODS FOR NEW RADAR OBSERVATIONS –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Kao-Shen Chung, National Central Univeristy, Taoyuan, Taiwan, Jidong Gao, NSSL/NOAA, Norman, OK

1:30 p.m.13A.1 TowardtheAssimilationofW-BandRadarDatainaKilometer-ScaleNWPModel. Mary Borderies, CNRM, Toulouse, France; O. Caumont, C. Augros, J. Delanoë, V. Ducrocq

1:45 p.m.13A.2 AssimilationofZDRColumnsforImprovingtheSpin-UpandForecastofConvectiveStormsinStorm-ScaleModels. Jacob Carlin, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; J. Gao, J. C. Snyder, A. V. Ryzhkov

2:00 p.m.13A.3 DevelopmentofaMoment-BasedPolarimetricRadarForwardOperator. Charlotte Martinkus, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; M. R. Kumjian, O. P. Prat, S. Collis, M. van Lier-Walqui, H. C. Morrison

2:15 p.m.13A.4 UncertaintiesAssessmentofSyntheticRadarSimulations. Alexis Berne, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland; D. Wolfensberger

1:30 p.m.–2:30 p.m. Session 13B: MOVING PLATFORMS. VEHICLE, AIRBORNE, SHIPBORNE AND SPACEBORNE 3: MOVING PLATFORMS AT ALTITUDE =0. –St. Gallen

Co-Chair(s): Alain Protat, Bureau of Meteorology, Docklands, Australia, Joshua Wurman, Center for Severe Weather Research, Boulder, CO

1:30 p.m.13B.1 EstimationofFresh-WaterFluxanditsImpacttotheOceanicStratificationontheCoastalHeavyRainintheMaritimeContinent:ACaseStudyusingR/VMiraiShipboardPolarimetricRadar. Masaki Katsumata, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology (JAMSTEC), Yokosuka, Japan; B. Geng, S. Mori, Q. Moteki, H. Bellenger

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1:45 p.m.13B.2 UtilityofaShipborneDisdrometerandMarineNavigationRadarduringConvectiveandStratiformRain. Elizabeth J. Thompson, APL/Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA; K. Drushka, W. E. Asher

2:00 p.m.13B.3 RadarObservedVariabilityinRainfallduringOLYMPEx. Brenda Dolan, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; S. Rutledge, W. Xu

2:15 p.m.13B.4 TheBushfireConvectivePlumeExperiment:AMobileX-bandFieldCampaignintoFire-DrivenConvectioninAustralia. Nicholas McCarthy, Univ. of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia; H. McGowan, A. Guyot, A. Dowdy

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Poster Session 4: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS: POSTERS 2. –Zurich

Organizer(s): Matthew R. Kumjian, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK , Marcus van Lier-Walqui, Univ. of Miami/RSMAS, Miami, FL

79 RaindropBreakupandCoalescenceDiagnosedfromDual-WavelengthVerticallyPointingRadarObservations. Christopher R. Williams, CIRES/Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO

80 SpatialVariabilityoftheMeltingLayerinanAlpineValleyUsingaPolarimetricX-bandRadar. Floortje E.M. van den Heuvel, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland; A. Berne, M. Gabella

81 MicrophysicalPropertiesofSnowfallintheSwissAlpsasderivedfromCollocatedMulti-AngleSnowflakeCameraandW-bandCloudProfilerMeasurements. Christophe Praz, Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland; Y. A. Roulet, A. Berne

82 DerivingSnowfallMicrophysicalPropertiesandTestingConnectionwithTriple-FrequencyRadarObservation. Davide Ori, Univ. of Cologne, Köln, Germany; D. Moisseev, A. von Lerber, J. Tiira, G. J. Huang, J. Leinonen, V. Chandrasekar

83 CloudRadarSpectralPolarimetryforQuantitativePrecipitationEstimation. Alexander Myagkov, Radiometer Physics GmbH, Meckenheim, Germany; T. Rose

84 GraupelMicrophysicalPropertiesand95GHzAttenuationfromAirborneDopplerCloudRadarandin-SituMicrophysicalObservations. Surendra Rauniyar, Bureau of Meteorology, Docklands, Australia; A. Protat, J. Delanoë, E. Fontaine, D. Leroy, A. Schwarzenboeck

85 PreliminaryAnalysisofDual-PolarizationSignaturesAssociatedwithLightningCessationinMulticellularConvection. Kurtis Pinkney, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; L. D. Carey

86 InvestigatingDependencesofZe-S-RelationonMicrophysicalPropertiesofSnow. Annakaisa von Lerber, Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland; D. Moisseev, L. F. Bliven, W. A. Petersen, A. M. Harri, V. Chandrasekar

87 AnalysisofPrecipitationProcessesinCloudsInteractingwithComplexTerrainduringtheOLYMPEXFieldCampaign. Alexis Hunzinger, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; W. A. Petersen

88 APolarimetricandMicrophysicalAnalysisoftheStratiformRainRegionofMCSs. Amanda M. Murphy, Univ. of Oklahoma/CIMMS, Norman, OK; A. V. Ryzhkov, P. Zhang, G. M. McFarquhar, W. Wu, D. M. Stechman

89 DetectionandEstimationofHighIceWaterContentUsingX-andW-bandDual-PolarizationAirborneRadarData. Cuong Nguyen, National Research Council, Ottawa, ON, Canada; M. Wolde, K. Baibakov, A. Korolev

90 EstimatingSpectralDifferentialPhaseandSpectralSpecificDifferentialPhasetoRetrieveParticlePopulationSeparatedIceWaterContentProfiles. Christine Unal, Delft Univ. of Technology, Delft, Netherlands; L. Pfitzenmaier, Y. Dufournet, H. Russchenberg

91 EvaluationofSnow-LevelHeightEstimatesfromPolarimetricWSR-88DMeasurements. Sergey Matrosov, CIRES, Boulder, CO; R. Cifelli, A. B. White, T. Coleman

92 BulkMicrophysicsofMesoscaleConvectiveSystemsInferredfromPolarimetricRadarObservations. Shawn Handler, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; C. R. Homeyer

93 PolarimetricDopplerObservationsofIceParticleswithScanning94GHzCloudRadar. Alexander Myagkov, Radiometer Physics GmbH, Meckenheim, Germany; T. Rose

94 DominantHydrometeorTypeDistributionswithinBrazilianTropicalPrecipitationSystemsInferredfromX-BandDualPolarizationRadarMeasurements. Jean-François Ribaud, INPE, Cachoeira Paulista, Brazil; L. A. T. Machado, T. Biscaro

95 ObjectiveIdentificationandTrackingofZDRcolumnsinX-bandRadarObservationsofStorms. Patrick E Saunders, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN; R. Tanamachi, D. Dietz, W. Heberling, S. J. Frasier

96 ExaminingPolarimetricRadarObservationsofBulkMicrophysicalStructuresandTheirRelationtoVortexKinematicsinHurricaneArthur(2014). Anthony C. Didlake, Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA; M. R. Kumjian

97 BackscatterDifferentialPhaseofSmallLiquid-CoatedIceParticles. Robert S. Schrom, Pennsylvania State Univ., University Park, PA; M. R. Kumjian

98 MicrophysicalAnalysisofSnowfallusingS-bandPolarimetricRadarinSouthKorea. MiYoung Kang, Pukyong National Univ., Busan, Korea, Republic of (South); D. I. Lee, C. You, H. J. Kim, G. H. Kim, Y. S. Bang

99 PolarimetricThermodynamicRetrievalsintheMeltingLayer:One-DimensionalSpectralBinModelSimulations. Jacob Carlin, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; A. Ryzhkov

100 ComparativeAssessmentofSpecificDifferentialPhaseRetrieval. Nitin Bharadwaj, PNNL, Richland, WA; S. E. Giangrande, J. C. Hardin

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101 EnhancementonGPMDPRDual-FrequencyProfileClassificationModule. Minda Le, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; C. V. Chandra, S. K. Biswas, T. Iguchi

102 PrecipitationMicrophysicsofNon-TornadicSupercellNeartheRadarSiteofMRIinTsukuba,Japan. Nobuhiro Nagumo, MRI, Tsukuba, Japan; A. Adachi, W. Mashiko, H. Yamauchi

103 RadarSimulationStudiesforHydrometeorClassificationfromRangeProfileofPolarimetricRadarSignatures. Takahisa Kobayashi, Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry, Abiko, Japan; S. Sugimoto, M. Nomura, H. Hirakuchi, A. Adachi

104 VerticalProfilingofPrecipitationCharacteristicsforGPMGroundValidation. David B. Wolff, NASA Wallops Flight Facility, Wallops Island, VA; W. A. Petersen, D. A. Marks, J. L. Pippitt, A. Tokay, P. N. Gatlin

105 MicrophysicalRetrievalsfromSimultaneousMeasurementsbyAirborneandGroundRadarsduringOLYMPEX. Stephen Joseph Munchak, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD; I. S. Adams

106 DevelopmentofaHydrometeorClassifierfortheMetOfficeC-BandWeatherRadarNetwork. Steven Best, UKMO, Exeter, U.K.; D. Harrison, B. S. Pickering, R. R. Neely III

107 BAIRSII:TheSecondBuffaloAreaIcingandRadarStudy. David J. Smalley, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, MA; M. F. Donovan, E. R. Williams, J. M. Kurdzo, B. J. Bennett, M. Wolde, K. Baibakov, M. Bastian, C. Nguyen, A. Korolev, D. Hudak, P. Rodriguez, M. Harwood

108 InSituVerificationofAircraftIcingConditionsInvolvingNeedleCrystalsandSupercooledWaterinWinterStorms. Earle Williams, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, MA; D. J. Smalley, M. F. Donovan, J. M. Kurdzo, B. J. Bennett, M. Wolde, C. Nguyen, K. Baibakov, M. Bastian, A. Korolev, I. Heckman

109 WITHDRAWN

110 InvestigatingDynamicalandMicrophysicalMechanismsinaSquallLinethatInteractedwithTerrainDuringtheIPHEx-NOAAHMT-SEPSFieldCampaignintheSouthernAppalachians. Joshua Aikins, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO; K. Friedrich, R. Cifelli

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Poster Session 5: MOVING PLATFORMS. VEHICLE, AIRBORNE, SHIPBORNE AND SPACEBORNE: POSTERS 2. –Zurich

111 ComparingGPMSatellitetoGroundPlatformMeasurements:CaseStudiesfromtheNASAGPMWallopsPrecipitationScienceResearchFacility. Charanjit S. Pabla, NASA/WFF and SSAI, Wallops Island, VA; S. M. Wingo, D. B. Wolff, D. A. Marks, W. A. Petersen, P. N. Gatlin

112 ApplyingtheSIMBADataFusionFrameworktoOLYMPEX:Multi-PlatformObservationalAnalysisofanIntensivelySampledOrographicallyEnhancedPrecipitationEvent. Stephanie Mullins Wingo, NASA/MSFC and USRA, Huntsville, AL; W. A. Petersen, P. N. Gatlin, D. A. Marks, C. S. Pabla, D. B. Wolff

113 ResearchonDataSimulationMethodofGeostationaryDopplerWeatherRadar. Shunxian Tang, Chengdu Univ. of Information Technology, CMA Key Laboratory of Atmospheric Sounding, Chengdu, China; R. Li, J. He, X. Li, H. Wang

114 PrimeMissionResultsoftheDual-frequencyPrecipitationRadarontheGlobalPrecipitationMeasurementCoreSpacecraftandFutureSpacebornePrecipitationRadarConcepts. Kinji Furukawa, JAXA, Tsukuba, Japan; T. Nio, T. Kubota, R. Oki, T. Iguchi

115 SeaSurfaceScanningforMonitoringCalibrationandStabilityoftheNCARAirborneW-BandRadar. Robert A. Rilling, NCAR, Boulder, CO; U. Romatschke, J. Vivekanandan, S. Ellis

116 GPMGroundValidation:ComparativeStudyofSnowDetectionAlgorithms. Ali Tokay, JCET/Univ. of Maryland, Greenbelt, MD; N. Brubaker, D. V. Kliche, J. L. Pippitt, D. A. Marks, D. B. Wolff, W. A. Petersen

117 VerticalVariabilityofRainDropSizeDistributionfromMicroRainRadarandDisdrometerMeasurementsCollectedDuringIfloodsCampaign. Luca Baldini, CNR/ISAC, Rome, Italy; E. Adirosi, A. Tokay, N. Roberto, M. Montopoli, E. Gorgucci

118 GPMValidationNetworkDataandAnalysisResourcesforMultipleApplications. K. Robert Morris, SAIC, Greenbelt, MD; W. A. Petersen, M. R. Schwaller, J. L. Pippitt, T. Berendes

119 VariabilityandSensitivityofGPM-retrievedMassWeightedDiameteroverItaly. Leo Pio D’Adderio, Univ. of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy; G. Vulpiani, A. Tokay, F. Porcù

120 AttenuationandRadarReflectivityinMeltingLayermeasuredwithGround-basedKa-bandRadars. Yuki Kaneko, JAXA, Tsukuba, Japan; K. Nakamura, K. Suzuki, K. Nakagawa

121 AlignmentandComparisonbetweenSimultaneousGPMDual-frequencyPrecipitationRadarandGround-basedRadarObservations. Haiming Tan, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; V. Chandrasekar, H. Chen

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Poster Session 6: NEW AND EMERGING RADAR TECHNOLOGY: POSTERS 1. –Zurich

Organizer(s): Bradley Isom, PNNL, Richland, WA and Vijay Venkatesh, NASA Goddard, Greenbelt, MD

122 TheFutureisHere:CapabilitiesandPlansfortheAdvancedTechnologyDemonstratorattheNationalSevereStormsLaboratory. Sebastian M. Torres, CIMMS, Norman, OK

123 AnX-bandPhasedArrayWeatherRadarTestbed. William Heberling, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA; J. Waldinger, S. Frasier

124 TheNextGenerationofAirbornePolarimetricDopplerWeatherRadar:NCAR/EOLAirbornePhasedArrayRadar(APAR)Development. James A. Moore, NCAR, Boulder, CO; W. C. Lee, E. Loew, J. Vivekanandan, V. Grubišić, P. S. Tsai, M. Dixon, J. M. Emmett, M. Lord, L. L. Lussier III, K. Hwang, J. Ranson

125 FrequencyModulationContinuousWaveProfilingRadarforPrecipitationandObservationsinDifferentRegionsofChinaDuring2013-2016. Zheng RUAN, Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences(CAMS), Beijing, China; F. LI, Y. RUAN

126 UpdatesontheOUAll-DigitalDual-PolarizationPhasedArray(Horus). Caleb Fulton, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; R. D. Palmer, J. Salazar, H. Sigmarsson

127 AnExperimentalEvaluationofPhaseCodingtoMitigatetheCross-CouplingBiasesinPPAR. Igor R. Ivic, Univ. of Oklahoma/NSSL, Norman, OK

128 SignalProcessingforPerformanceImprovementofPhasedArrayWeatherRadar. Hiroshi Kikuchi, Tokyo Metropolitan Univ., Hino, Tokyo, Japan; T. Ushio, F. Mizutani, M. Wada

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129 ObservationofTornadicStormsinTokyoUrbanAreaByX-bandPhasedArrayWeatherRadar. Taro Kashiwayanagi, Japan Radio Co.,Ltd. / Chiba Univ., Saitama, Japan; K. Morotomi, F. Kobayashi, T. Takamura, T. Takano, A. Higuchi

130 AnApproachtoAlignSubarrayChannelsinPPARUsingWeatherReturns. Igor R. Ivic, Univ. of Oklahoma / NSSL, Norman, OK

131 PulseCompressionWeatherRadarwithImprovedSensitivity,RangeResolution,andRangeSidelobe. Koichiro Gomi, Toshiba Corporation, Kawasaki, Japan; K. Hashimoto, T. aoki, K. yamaguchi, T. Murano, A. Yamada, N. Anraku, M. Wada, A. Adachi

132 TheDevelopmentoftheGround-BasedW-bandElectronicalScanningCloudProfilingRadarforCalibrationandValidationofEarthCARE/CPR. Hiroaki Horie, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Koganei, Japan; H. Hanado, Y. Ohno

133 TechnicalAspectsandScientificApplicationsofNewVHFWindProfilerRadarat205MHz. Kesavapillai Mohanakumar, Cochin Univ. of Science and Technology, Cochin, India

134 AStudyontheBehaviourofIonospherewith205MHzSTWindProfilerRadaratCochinCoastalRegion. Rakesh Varadarajan, Advanced Centre for Atmospheric Radar Research, CUSAT, Kochi, India

135 TheNCARPhasedArrayRadarLineReplacementUnit(LRU):Integration,CharacterizationandPerformance. Pei-Sang Tsai, NCAR, Boulder, CO; E. Loew, B. Hwang, J. Salazar, R. M. Lebron

136 AHigh-SNRDopplerBeamSwingMethodforVHFAtmosphericRadar. Koji Nishimura, National Institute of Polar Research, Tachikawa, Japan; T. Hashimoto, M. Tsutsumi, K. Sato, T. Sato

137 WITHDRAWN

138 TheNCARModularProfilerDevelopment,RecentProgressandDeploymenttoPECAN. John Sobtzak, NCAR, Boulder, CO; W. O. J. Brown, T. Hock, C. Martin

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Poster Session 7: ORGANIZED CONVECTION AND SEVERE PHENOMENA: POSTERS 1. –Zurich

Organizer(s): Angela K. Rowe, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, Timothy J. Lang, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL

139 High-temporalResolutionObservationsofthe27May2015Canadian,Texas,TornadousingtheAtmosphericImagingRadar. Casey B. Griffin, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; D. Bodine, J. M. Kurdzo, A. Mahre, R. D. Palmer, J. Lujan Jr., A. Byrd

140 Three-DimensionalMultipleDopplerRadarWindSynthesisandThermodynamicRetrievaloverComplexTerrainandTheirApplicationsinSevereWeatherAnalyses. Yu-Chieng Liou, National Central Univ., Jhongli City, Taiwan; W. Y. Wang, Y. L. Teng, P. C. Yang

141 PX-1000ObservationsofMesoscaleConvectiveSystemsDuringPECAN. David J. Bodine, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; J. M. Kurdzo, B. L. Cheong, K. L. Rasmussen

142 Analysisofthe16May2015Tipton,OklahomaEF-3TornadoatHighSpatiotemporalResolutionUsingtheAtmosphericImagingRadar. Andrew Mahre, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; J. M. Kurdzo, D. J. Bodine, C. B. Griffin, R. D. Palmer, T. Y. Yu

143 PreliminaryResultsforVORTEX-SE2017:ImprovingRadarWindRetrievalsinPotentiallyTornadicStormsintheSoutheastUnitedStates. Karen A. Kosiba, Center for Severe Weather Research, Boulder, CO; J. Marquis, J. Wurman

144 PlainsElevatedConvectionAtNight(PECAN):EvaluatingSevereSurfaceWindPotentialinNocturnalMCSs. Karen A. Kosiba, Center for Severe Weather Research, Boulder, CO; J. Wurman

145 Analysisofthe6July2015PECANMCSUtilizingAirborne-andGround-BasedDopplerObservationsandAirborneIn-SituMicrophysicalData. Daniel M. Stechman, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; R. M. Rauber, G. M. McFarquhar, M. M. Bell, B. F. Jewett, R. A. Black, D. P. Jorgensen, T. J. Schuur

146 ObservationsofHailstormsfromMulti-frequencyAirborneandGround-basedPolarimetricRadarDuringMC3EandIPHEX. Lin Tian, Morgan State Univ./NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD; G. M. Heymsfield, M. Grecu

147 AnAnalysisoftheEvolutionandStructureofaMultiple-Tornado-ProducingSupercellNearDodgeCity,KS,on24May2016. Zachary B. Wienhoff, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; H. B. Bluestein, L. J. Wicker, J. C. Snyder, A. Shapiro, C. K. Potvin, D. W. Reif

148 AMulti-ParameterPredictorforImprovedConvectiveWindsNowcastingatCapeCanaveralUsingC-bandDual-PolarizationRadarandEnvironmentalObservations. Bruno L. Medina, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; C. G. Amiot, R. M. Mecikalski, L. D. Carey, W. P. Roeder, T. M. McNamara, R. J. Blakeslee

149 ConvectiveCoreVerticalVelocityPropertiesandRelationshipwithHydrometeorsinMid-latitudeContinentalMesoscaleConvectiveSystems. Zhe Feng, PNNL, Richland, WA; S. Giangrande, J. C. Hardin

150 AnExaminationofConvectiveEnhancementwithinComplexTerrainon5April2017duringVORTEX-SE. Todd A. Murphy, Univ. of Louisiana, Monroe, LA; R. A. Wade, A. W. Lyza, K. R. Knupp

151 RadarDeterminedDynamicalandMicrophysicalPropertiesofWetSeasonConvectioninDarwinAsaFunctionofWetSeasonRegime. Robert Jackson, ANL, Lemont, IL; S. Collis, A. Protat, V. Louf, L. Majewski, T. J. Lang, C. K. Potvin

152 PreliminaryAnalysisofThree-DimensionalWindoverComplexTerraininSouthKoreaUsingMultiple-DopplerRadarObservations. Chia-Lun Tsai, Kyungpook National Univ., Daegu, Korea, Republic of (South); K. Kim, Y. C. Liou, G. Lee

153 ChangesintheRadialandTangentialDistributionofRadarReflectivityDuringTropicalCycloneLandfallsOvertheUnitedStates. Corene J. Matyas, Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, FL; J. Tang, S. E. Zick, M. Schneider

154 WITHDRAWN

155 WITHDRAWN

156 StructureofHailstormsinNorthCarolinaObtainedfromEXRADAirborneRadarDuringIPHEx. Gerald M. Heymsfield, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD; L. Tian, S. Guimond, L. Li, M. McLinden

157 RadarCharacteristicsofConvectiveDowndraftsandEnvironmentsObservedduringtheVORTEX-SoutheastProject. James Marquis, Center for Severe Weather Research, Boulder, CO; J. Wurman, K. Kosiba, P. Robinson

158 UsingSingle-andDual-DopplerAnalysistoExaminetheVorticityandConvergenceAlongGradientsinRoughnessLength. Timothy A. Coleman, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL

159 RadarObservationsofaSmallTornadoon5April2017duringVORTEX-SE. Anthony W. Lyza, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; K. Knupp

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160 APreliminaryAssessmentofInfrasonicTornadoDetectionviaComparisonwithDual-PolarizationDopplerRadar. Barrett Goudeau, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; K. Knupp, H. Rinehart

161 RadarDataCharacteristicsofTwoSevereConvectiveSystemsInflictingMassiveFatalitiesinChina. Yongguang Zheng, National Meteorological Center/CMA, Beijing, China; W. Zhu

162 AnalyzingTornadicDebrisSignaturesbyIntegratingAerialImageryandPolarimetricRadarDatainGIS. Angela R. Burke, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; R. Wade, R. Griffin, A. W. Lyza, D. M. Conrad

163 TheRoleofPolarimetric,DopplerVelocity,andSpectrumWidthSignaturesintheReanalysisofaQLCSTornadoCluster. Richard Castro, NOAA/NWS, Romeoville, IL; A. Lyza, A. W. Clayton, B. Borchardt, E. Lenning, M. Friedlein, K. R. Knupp

164 OperationalApplicationsofEnvironmentalandRadarPredictorsforTornadoIntensity. Matthew Friedlein, NOAA/NWS, Romeoville, IL; B. Deubelbeiss, E. Lenning, A. W. Clayton, A. Lyza

165 UtilizingEnvironmentalandRadarPredictorstoAnticipateTornadoIntensity. Adam W. Clayton, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; E. Lenning, M. Friedlein, A. W. Lyza, K. Knupp

166 WITHDRAWN

2:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Poster Session 8: RADAR NETWORKS, QUALITY CONTROL, PROCESSING AND SOFTWARE: POSTERS 1. –Zurich

167 UseofMid-LevelModelWindDataandVADWindstoImproveWSR-88DVelocityDealiasing. Autumn D. Losey, Radar Operations Center, Norman, OK; W. D. Zittel, Z. Jing

168 OPERA-HarmonizingtheEuropeanWeatherRadarNetwork. Markus Peura, Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland; M. Martet, A. J. Huuskonen, L. Delobbe, B. Lipovscak, H. Leijnse, E. Saltikoff

169 TheWindDataErrorProcessiongUsingRadialPowerSpectrumofShanghaiRadarWindProfilerNetwork. Chen Haojun, Shanghai Meteorological Bureau, Shanghai City, China; W. Qindian, S. Jing, Y. Chunguang, Z. Jie, X. Hao

170 RainbowScientificTool:AnEfficientWaytoHarmonizeandOptimizeAHeterogeneousWeatherRadarNetwork. Hassan Al Sakka, Selex ES GmbH, Neuss, Germany; A. Weipert

171 DesignaFastMulti-RadarGriddingAlgorithmonModernCPUandGPUHardware. Jingyin Tang, Univ. of Florida, Gainesville, FL; K. Park, C. J. Matyas, M. Schneider

172 ARTViewTowardsanOpenSourceGraphicalUserInterfaceforRadarData. Anderson Luis Gama, Univ. of Stuttgart, Stuttgart, Germany; N. Guy

173 Pyrad:aReal-TimeWeatherRadarDataProcessingFrameworkBasedonPy-ART. Jordi Figueras i Ventura, MeteoSwiss, Locarno, Switzerland; A. Leuenberger, Z. Künsch, J. Grazioli, U. Germann

174 DataQualityMonitoringTechniquesonaMobileX-bandDopplerPolarimetricWeatherRadar. Jacopo Grazioli, MeteoSwiss, Locarno, Switzerland; Z. Künsch, J. Figueras i Ventura, A. Leuenberger, U. Germann

175 AustralianNationalRadarArchiveintheCloud-ApplicationsforResearchandIndustry. Joshua S. Soderholm, Univ. of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia

176 QualityControlofSeaClutterandConstantPowerFunctionArtifactsforOperationalU.S.NavyShipboardRadarDataAssimilation. Paul R. Harasti, NRL, Monterey, CA

177 ChuvaOnline:AX-BandRadarNetworkUsedforHighSpatialandTemporalRainfallMonitoring. Carlos A. Morales, Univ. of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil; J. Testud, P. javelle, E. Moreau, K. L. Rocha Filho, F. Conde

178 AnUpdatedRadar-BasedStormRotationClimatologyfortheCONUS. Brandon R. Smith, OU/CIMMS and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; K. L. Ortega

179 RadarBeamBlockageProcessesintheMulti-RadarMulti-SensorSystem. Lin Tang, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; J. Zhang, Y. Qi, S. B. Cocks, K. W. Howard

180 Baron’sProcessorSuite-ANewParadigmforWeatherRadarDataProcessing. Mrinal S. Balaji, Baron Services, Inc, Huntsville, AL; J. R. Ellis, R. D. Cartwright, J. H. Lee

181 ShouldInterpolationofReflectivitybePerformedinZordBZ?. Robert A. Warren, Monash Univ., Melbourne, Australia; A. Protat

182 AddressingDataQualityChallengesfortheNCMSDual-PolRadarsintheUAE. M. Dixon, NCAR, Boulder, CO; K. P. J. de Waal, A. Mandoos

183 PyDSD:APythonLibraryforWorkingwithDisdrometers,ParticleProbes,andDropSizeDistributions. Joseph C. Hardin, PNNL, Richland, WA; N. Guy

184 ANewlyCalibratedLong-TermRadarDatasetofTropicalConvection. Valentin Louf, Bureau of Meteorology, Melbourne, Australia; A. Protat, C. Jakob

4:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m. Session 14A: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS 3: ICE SCATTERING –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Marcus van Lier-Walqui, Univ. of Miami/RSMAS, Miami, FL, Matthew R. Kumjian, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK

4:00 p.m.14A.1 Bulk-DensityRepresentationsofBranchedPlanarIceCrystals:ErrorsinthePolarimetricRadarVariables. Robert S. Schrom, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; M. R. Kumjian, Z. Jiang, J. Verlinde, E. Clothiaux, K. Aydin

4:15 p.m.14A.2 InfluenceofIceParticleSizeandShapeBiasesonRadarPolarimetricVariables. Zhiyuan Jiang, Penn State, Univ. Park, PA; K. Aydin, J. Verlinde, E. E. Clothiaux

4:30 p.m.14A.3 ComparisonofDifferentSnowflakeModelsandIn-situMeasurementsinFinlandDuringtheWinterof2014. Jani Tyynela, Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland; A. von Lerber, D. Moisseev

4:45 p.m.14A.4 ACaseEventAnalysisUsingMulti-Angle-Snowflake-CameraandCSU-CHILLX-BandObservationsinGreeley,Colorado:DegreeofRimingandParticleClassification. Branislav M. Notaros, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; C. Praz, P. Kennedy, M. Thurai, A. Berne, V. N. Bringi

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4:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m. Session 15B: NEW AND EMERGING RADAR TECHNOLOGY 2: NOVEL SYSTEMS AND MEASUREMENTS –St. Gallen

Co-Chair(s): Vijay Venkatesh, NASA Goddard , Greenbelt, MD and Eric Loew, NCAR EOL, Boulder, CO

4:00 p.m.15B.1 WaterVaporMeasurementSystemusingDigitalTerrestrialBroadcastingWaves. Seiji Kawamura, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Tokyo, Japan; . Hanado, T. Kouketsu, H. Ohta, T. Iguchi

4:15 p.m.15B.2 DevelopmentofaMobileC-bandPolarimetricAtmosphericImagingRadar(PAIR). Jorge Salazar, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; T. Y. Yu, C. Fulton, M. McCord, R. D. Palmer, H. B. Bluestein, B. L. Cheong, M. I. Biggerstaff, B. M. Isom, J. M. Kurdzo, R. J. Doviak, X. Wang, M. B. Yeary

4:30 p.m.15B.3 DetectionandIdentificationofRemotelyPilotedAircraftSystemsUsingWeatherRadar. Krzysztof Orzel, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA; S. Govindasamy, A. Bennett, D. Pepyne, S. Frasier

4:45 p.m.15B.4 FrequencyDiversityWaveformswithARMCloudRadars. Nitin Bharadwaj, PNNL, Richland, WA; B. M. Isom, J. B. Mead

5:00 p.m.–6:00 p.m. Plenary Session 15: TRIBUTE TO THE TRAILBLAZERS OF RADAR METEOROLOGY: DAVE ATLAS, ROGER LHERMITTE AND EDWIN KESSLER –VeVey

Wednesday, August 307:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Registration–Monte Rosa Reg.

Desk

9:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Exhibits Open–Zurich

10:00 a.m.–10:30 a.m. Coffee Break–Zurich

1:30 p.m.–3:00 p.m. Young Scientist Networking Meeting sponsored by Metek- 2nd Floor Prefunction

3:30 p.m.–5:00 p.m. Chicago Architecture Foundation River Cruise Tour (Ticketed Event)

8:00 a.m.–8:30 a.m. Keynote Speaker 16: RADAR NETWORKS, QUALITY CONTROL, PROCESSING AND SOFTWARE: KEYNOTE –VeVey

8:00 a.m.KS16.1CalibratingGround-BasedRadarsUsingTRMMandGPM. Robert A. Warren, Monash Univ., Melbourne, Australia; A. Protat, S. T. Siems, H. A. Ramsay, M. J. Manton

8:30 a.m.–9:00 a.m. Keynote Speaker 17: QUANTITATIVE PRECIPITATION ESTIMATION AND HYDROLOGY: KEYNOTE. –VeVey

8:30 a.m.KS17.1High-ResolutionQuantitativePrecipitationEstimationandNowcastUsingDual-PolarizationRadarNetwork. V. Chandrasekar, Colorado State Univ., Ft. Collins, CO; H. Chen, W. A. Petersen, R. Cifelli

9:00 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Session 18A: CLOUD STUDIES USING RADARS 1 –St. Gallen 3

Co-Chair(s): Paloma Borque, Univ. of Illinios, Urbana, IL, Mark Kulie, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI

9:00 a.m.18A.1 AnOverviewoftheCAPEWeatherExperimentsUsingtheU.S.NavyMid-CourseDopplerRadar. Jerome Schmidt, NRL, Monterey, CA; P. Flatau, P. R. Harasti, R. D. Yates

9:15 a.m.18A.2 SynopticandSpatialDependenceofCloudPropertiesatOliktokPointinNorthernAlaska. Maximilian Maahn, Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO; G. de Boer, S. Y. Matrosov, M. Stone, P. O. G. Persson

9:30 a.m.18A.3 ClimatologyofMillimeterWavelengthRadarDopplerSpectraShape. Edward P. Luke, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY; P. Kollias, M. Maahn

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9:45 a.m.18A.4 Multi-FrequencyRadar/PassiveMicrowaveretrievalsofColdSeasonPrecipitationfromOLYMPEXdata. Alessandro Battaglia, Univ. of Leicester, Leicester, U.K.; F. Tridon, J. Turk, S. Tanelli, S. Kneifel, J. Leinonen, P. Kollias, K. Mróz

9:00 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Session 18B: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS 4: ICE SCATTERING –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Christopher R. Williams, CIRES/Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO, Daniel T. Dawson, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN

9:00 a.m.18B.1 SynergyBetweenCloudRadarPolarimetryandDopplerSpectrainArcticIceandMixed-PhaseClouds. Mariko Oue, Stony Brook Univ., Stony Brook, NY; P. Kollias, E. Luke, A. Ryzhkov

9:15 a.m.18B.2 ActiveandPassiveVectorRadiativeTransferModelforThree-DimensionalStudiesofCloudsandPrecipitation. Ian Stuart Adams, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD; S. J. Munchak, G. M. Heymsfield

9:30 a.m.18B.3 HydrometeorMixturesinPolarimetricRadarMeasurements:Bin-basedandNeighborhood-basedDe-mixing. Nikola Besic, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), Lausanne, Switzerland; J. Figueras i Ventura, J. Grazioli, M. Gabella, U. Germann, A. Berne

9:45 a.m.18B.4 Dual-Frequency(W-Kaband)AirborneReflectivityProfileswithCenteredinSituParticleProbeData:ANewToolforCloudPhysicsResearch. Bart Geerts, Univ. of Wyoming, Laramie, WY; A. W. Tripp, S. J. Haimov, J. R. French, A. L. Pazmany

9:00 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Session 18C: RADAR NETWORKS, QUALITY CONTROL, PROCESSING AND SOFTWARE 1 –St. Gallen 1&2

Co-Chair(s): Hidde Leijnse, KNMI, De Bilt, Netherlands, Irene Crisologo, Universitat Potsdam, Potsdam-Golm, Germany

9:00 a.m.18C.1 OnTheRiseofaCommunityofaCommunityRadarSoftwarePackages. Scott Collis, ANL, Argonne, IL; M. J. Dixon, M. M. Bell, D. Michelson, K. Muehlbauer, M. Heistermann

9:15 a.m.18C.2 MultiDop:AnOpen-Source,Python-Powered,Multi-DopplerRadarAnalysisSuite. Timothy J. Lang, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL; C. K. Potvin, R. Jackson, S. Collis, B. Dolan, C. J. Schultz

9:30 a.m.18C.3 WatchdogforARMRadarNetworkOperations(WARNO). Joseph C. Hardin, PNNL, Richland, WA; E. Schuman

9:45 a.m.18C.4 TheLidarRadarOpenSoftwareEnvironment(LROSE):ProgressandPlans. Michael M. Bell, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; M. Dixon, W. C. Lee

10:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Session 19A: ORGANIZED CONVECTION AND SEVERE PHENOMENA 2: GENERAL TOPICS. –VeVey

Chair(s): Zhe Feng, PNNL, Richland, WA, Kiel L. Ortega, Univ. of Oklahoma/CIMMS and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK

10:30 a.m.19A.1 CombinedPolarimetricDopplerRadarandSatelliteScatterometerObservationsofOrganizedConvectionNearCoastalRegions. Timothy J. Lang, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL; G. Priftis, T. Chronis, P. Garg, S. W. Nesbitt

10:45 a.m.19A.2 UsingMobileDopplerRadarObservationstoInferBuoyancyDeficitswithinThunderstormOutflow. Abby L. Kenyon, Texas Tech Univ., Lubbock, TX; C. C. Weiss, G. H. Bryan

11:00 a.m.19A.3 RelationshipBetweenConvectiveSystemsandtheProductionandMaintenanceofAssociatedColdPools. Paloma Borque, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; S. Nesbitt, R. J. Trapp, S. Lasher-Trapp

11:15 a.m.19A.4 AComparisonofMisovorticesFoundWithinTwoLongLake-Axis-ParallelLake-effectSnowBandsduringtheOWLeSProject. Scott M. Steiger, SUNY, Oswego, NY; B. Bealo, N. Hammond, T. Cain

11:30 a.m.19A.5 Rapid-ScanDual-PolarizationRadarObservationsofZdrColumnDepthintheContextofForecasterConceptualModels. Charles M. Kuster, OU/CIMMS and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; J. C. Snyder, P. L. Heinselman, T. J. Schuur

11:45 a.m.19A.6 EnKFandPolarimetricAnalysesofthe31May2013ElReno,OklahomaSupercellduringTornadogenesis. Patrick Skinner, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; J. C. Snyder, L. J. Wicker, H. B. Bluestein, K. J. Thiem

12:00 a.m.19A.7 StormEnvironmentsSupportingSpaceborneRadarandGOES-observedExtremeConvectiveStormsinCentralArgentina. Stephen W. Nesbitt, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; K.?. L. Rasmussen, M. Cancelada, P. Salio, L. Vidal, J. Mulholland, R. J. Trapp

12:15 a.m.19A.8 HailDetectionAlgorithmfortheGlobalPrecipitationMeasuringMissionCoreSatelliteSensors. Kamil Mróz, National Centre for Earth Observation, Leicester, U.K.; A. Battaglia, T. J. Lang, D. J. Cecil, S. Tanelli, F. Tridon

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10:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m. Session 19B: USE OF RADAR DATA FOR NOWCASTING AND NUMERICAL MODELS 4: RADAR DATA ASSIMILATION FOR NWP –St. Gallen 1&2

Chair(s): Dustan Wheatley, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK, Rita Roberts, NCAR/RAL, Boulder, CO

10:30 a.m.19B.1 TestofaWeather-AdaptiveHybrid3DEnVARandWRF-DARTAnalysisandForecastSystemDuringtheHWTSpringExperimentsin2017. Jidong Gao, NSSL/NOAA, Norman, OK; Y. Wang, D. M. Wheatley, K. H. Knopfmeier, T. A. Jones, G. Creager

10:45 a.m.19B.2 ExpandingUseofRadarDatainDeterministicandEnsembleDataAssimilationfortheHigh-ResolutionRapidRefresh(HRRR). Curtis Alexander, NOAA/ESRL/GSD, Boulder, CO; D. Dowell, M. Hu, T. Ladwig, S. Weygandt, S. G. Benjamin

11:00 a.m.19B.3 High-ResolutionRadarDataAssimilationforHurricanesNearLandfalls. Zhaoxia Pu, Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; W. C. Lee

11:15 a.m.19B.4 AnEffectiveApproachforAssimilatingRadarReflectivityina4DVARSystem. Juanzhen Sun, NCAR, Boulder, CO; Y. Zhang, J. Ban, J. S. Hong

11:30 a.m.19B.5 AssimilationofDual-PolarizationRadarObservationsintoMétéoFranceConvectiveScaleModelAROME. Clotilde Augros, Météo France, Toulouse, France; O. Caumont, V. Ducrocq, N. Gaussiat

11:45 a.m.19B.6 ImpactofAssimilatingAdditionalThermodynamicVariableswithRadarObservationsintheEnKFSystematConvectiveScale. Kao-Shen Chung, National Central Univeristy, Taoyuan, Taiwan; C. Y. Ke

12:00 a.m.19B.7 ImplementingtheLatentHeatNudging(LHN)AlgorithmintheCanadianRegionalDeterministicPredictionSystem(RDPS). Dominik Jacques, EC, Dorval, QC, Canada; D. B. Michelson, L. FIllion

12:15 a.m.19B.8 SensitivitiesofVeryShort-TermNumericalPredictiontoPolarimetricRadarDataAssimilation:TyphoonSoudelor(2015). Chih-Chien Tsai, Taiwan Typhoon and Flood Research Institute, Taipei, Taiwan; Y. Jung

Thursday, August 317:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Registration–Monte Rosa Reg.

Desk

9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Formal Poster Viewing and Cof-fee Break–Zurich

12:00 p.m.–1:30 p.m. Lunch Break

3:30 p.m.–4:00 p.m. Coffee Break–Zurich DEFG8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m. Session 20A: NEW AND EMERGING RADAR TECHNOLOGY 3: INNOVATIONS IN SIGNAL PROCESSING –St. Gallen

Co-Chair(s): Tian-You Yu, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK and Bradley Isom, PNNL, Richland, WA

8:00 a.m.20A.1 Multi-DopplerProcessinginPhasedArrayWeatherRadarNetworkEnvironmentforThree-AxisVelocityRetrieval. Eiichi Yoshikawa, JAXA, Mitaka, Japan; Y. Takahashi, T. Ushio, V. Chandrasekar

8:15 a.m.20A.2 QuadraticPhaseCodedRadar. James B. Mead, ProSensing Inc, Amherst, MA

8:30 a.m.20A.3 ANewRFIFilteringTechniqueforWeatherRadar. John Y. N. Cho, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, MA

8:45 a.m.20A.4 DancingtheRadarSensitivityLimbo:HowLowCanWeGo? Frédéric Fabry, McGill Univ., Montreal, QC, Canada

9:00 a.m.20A.5 UseofAdaptiveFilteringTechniquesandDeconvolutiontoObtainLowSidelobeRangeSamplesinNASAD3RRadar. Mohit Kumar, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; V. Chandrasekar

9:15 a.m.20A.6 RadarDetectionofElectrifiedCloudAreas. Valery Melnikov, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; D. Zrnic

8:00 a.m.–9:30 a.m. Session 20B: ORGANIZED CONVECTION AND SEVERE PHENOMENA 4: TORNADOES –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Casey Griffin, Univ. of Oklahoma Norman, OK, Zachary B. Wienhoff, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK

8:00 a.m.20B.1 TheTWIRL(TornadoWindsfromIn-situandRadarsatLow-level)Project:ProjectOverviewandCombinedRadar-inSitu-damageAnalyses. Karen A. Kosiba, Center for Severe Weather Research, Boulder, CO; J. Wurman, P. Robinson

8:15 a.m.20B.2 ExaminationoftheRelationshipsbetweenPolarimetricRadarSignaturesandKinematicProcessesUsingHigh-ResolutionWRFSimulations. David J. Bodine, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; C. B. Griffin, K. L. Rasmussen

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8:30 a.m.20B.3 TheRoleofHorizontalShearingInstabilityinMesovortexgenesisinthe04January2015Quasi-LinearConvectiveSystem. Dustin M. Conrad, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; K. R. Knupp

8:45 a.m.20B.4 The29-30November2016NorthernAlabamaTornadoOutbreak,Part1:RadarandVerticalProfilingObservationsofaComplexSupercellMesocyclone. Carter B. Hulsey, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; K. Knupp, A. W. Lyza, R. A. Wade

9:00 a.m.20B.5 The29-30November2016NorthernAlabamaTornadoOutbreak,Part2:Radar,Profiler,andIn-SituObservationsoftheRoleofTopographyinSupercellandTornadoEnvironmentalEvolution. Anthony W. Lyza, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; C. B. Hulsey, R. Wade, K. Knupp

9:15 a.m.20B.6 RecentResultsUsingRaXPoltoDocumentTornadogenesisandRecentUpgradestotheRadar. Howard B. Bluestein, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; B. L. Cheong, Z. B. Wienhoff, D. W. Reif, K. J. Thiem

9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Poster Session 9: CLOUD STUDIES USING RADARS: POSTERS. –Zurich DeFG

185 High-ResolutionDopplerRadarandRadiometerAnalysisofaColdFrontToppedwithAtmosphericWaves. Timothy A. Coleman, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; K. Knupp, P. N. Gatlin

186 Extractionof3DCloudInformationUsingStereoscopicPhotogrammetry. Hong Jiang, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; B. L. Cheong, T. Y. Yu

187 ExplorationofSupercooledWaterDetectioninOrographicCloudsUsingDifferentialAttenuationatW-Band. Adam C. Springer, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; R. M. Rauber, S. Ellis

188 RelationshipbetweenPolarimetricParametersObtainedByaKa-BandRadarandCharacteristicsofSolidHydrometeorsinSnowClouds. Taro Shinoda, Nagoya Univ., Nagoya, Japan; T. Ohigashi, M. Kubo, Y. Minami, K. Suzuki, H. Minda, M. Kyushima, N. Takahashi, K. Tsuboki

189 ComparisonofPolarimetricParametersObtainedbyaKa-bandRadarwiththosebyC-andX-bandRadarsinRelationtoCharacteristicsofHydrometeors. Tomohiro Nagaya, Nagoya Univ., Nagoya-shi, Japan; T. Shinoda, T. Ohigashi, S. Kawamura, H. Yamada, K. Yamaguchi, K. Suzuki, K. Tsuboki, E. Nakakita

190 DataQualityControlofKa-bandCloudRadarforDetectingCumulusClouds. Takeshi Maesaka, National Research Institute for Earth Science and Disaster Resilience, Tsukuba, Japan; K. Iwanami, S. I. Suzuki, Y. Shusse, N. Sakurai

191 VerticalStructureofCloudOccurrenceinKoreanPeninsulaforGround-BasedMillimeterWavelengthRadarObservations. GyuWon Lee, Kyungpook National Univ., Daegu, Korea, Republic of (South); B. Y. Ye

192 Ka-BandCloudRadarComparisonofVerticalandSlantedPolarizationonTransmit. Matthias Richard Bauer-Pfundstein, METEK, Meteorologische Messtechnik GmbH, Elmshorn, Germany

193 ConstructionofJAXAEarthCAREA-TrainResearchProduct. Yuichiro Hagihara, JAXA, Tsukuba, Japan; M. Kikuchi, T. Kubota, R. Oki, H. Okamoto

194 Calibration,Characterization,andDataQualityoftheScanningARMCloudRadar(SACR). Bradley M. Isom, PNNL, Richland, WA; N. Bharadwaj

9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Poster Session 10: NEW AND EMERGING RADAR TECHNOLOGY: POSTERS 2. –Zurich DeFG

195 OptimalSignalDetectabilityusingDiscreteFourierTransformProcessing. James Mead, ProSensing Inc., Amherst, MA

196 ARealisticDual-PolarizationRadarTime-SeriesSimulatorBasedonArchivedData. David Schvartzman, CIMMS, Norman, OK; C. D. Curtis

197 Media’sRoleinBuildingaWeather-ReadyNation:DeploymentoftheFirstNetworkofTVStation-OwnedHigh-FrequencyS-Band&MobileX-BandWeatherRadarSystemsintheUS. Richard Stedronsky, Enterprise Electronics Corporation, Enterprise, AL

198 SZ-2AlgorithmUpdatesfortheNEXRADNetwork. David A. Warde, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; S. M. Torres, D. Schvartzman

199 CoherentPowerMeasurementswithaCompactAirborneKa-BandPrecipitationRadar(KPR). Andrew L. Pazmany, ProSensing Inc., Amherst, MA; S. J. Haimov

200 OperationalImplementationofaRobustNear-RealTimeRadarCalibrationandMonitoringTechniqueforAustralianBureauofMeteorologyOperationalRadars. Surendra Rauniyar, Bureau of Meteorology, Docklands, Australia; V. H. M. Louf, R. A. Warren, A. Protat

201 APreliminaryStudyonRadarBright-bandoverNyingchiRegioninTibet. Xu Wang, Chengdu Univ. of Information Technology, ChengDu, China; Y. Hao, J. He, Z. Shi, H. Chen

202 DevelopmentandDeploymentofanX-bandReflect-ArrayRadar. Michihiro S. Teshiba, Weathernews Inc, Chiba, Japan; C. Fulton, H. Sigmarsson, N. Tahir, N. Aboserwal

203 UAV-BasedAbsoluteRadarCalibration. Jiapeng Yin, Delft Univ. of Technology, Delft, Netherlands; F. van der Zwan, E. Oudejans, C. M. H. Unal, H. Russchenberg

204 SystemDesignofTheNextGenerationWeatherRadarforEnvironmentandClimateChangeCanada(ECCC). Dennis Vollbracht, Selex ES GmbH, Neuss, Germany; D. Ridene

205 SystemOverviewofTheTransportableC-bandKlystronRadarforTheIndianInstituteofTropicalMeteorology(IITM). Dennis Vollbracht, Selex ES GmbH, Neuss, Germany; D. Hilger, H. Niebaum, C. Duncker

206 AnInvestigationoftheRequirementsofanAirborne,ScanningPolarimetricPhasedArrayRadartoAccuratelyMeasureHydrometeorPropertiesNeartheEarth’sSurface. Jothiram Vivekanandan, NCAR, Boulder, CO; Eric Loew

207 StatusofStudiesontheGeostationaryPrecipitationRadarSatellite. Kinji Furukawa, JAXA, Tsukuba, Japan; D. Jodoi, Y. Kaneko, T. Iguchi

208 TheARM’sredesignedXbandScanningPrecipitationRadarNetworkintheSouthernGreatPlains,Oklahoma. Iosif Andrei Lindenmaier, PNNL, Richland, WA; F. O’Hora, N. Bharadwaj, B. M. Isom, J. C. Hardin

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209 UsingSimulationstoRefineWeatherSurveillanceRadarRequirementsforSENSR. Feng Nai, Cooperative Institute for Mesoscale Meteorological Studies, and NOAA/OAR/National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, OK; D. Schvartzman, C. D. Curtis, S. M. Torres

210 ImplementationofaPhase-SpinDual-PolarizedWeatherRadar. Jezabel Vilardell Sanchez, Univ. of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA; K. Orzel, S. Frasier

211 UsingMultitapertoImproveMeteorologicalEstimatesWhenFilteringGroundClutter. Christopher Curtis, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; D. Warde

212 PotentialUtilizationofRainfallEstimationforSolid-StateX-bandDual-Polarizationradar. Gyuwon Lee, Kyungpook National Univ., Daegu, Korea, Republic of (South); D. Lee, S. H. Jung, A. Ryzhkov, S. J. Oh, J. kim, J. D. Lee, B. L. Cheong, R. D. Palmer, T. Y. Yu

213 PassiveBistaticRadarUsingWeatherRadarsandElectromagneticVectorSensors. G.V. Prateek, Washington Univ., St. Louis, MO; M. Hurtado, A. Nehorai

214 W-BandandX-BandRadarRadiometerforAllWeatherStudiesofTotalAtmosphericAttenuation. Ivan PopStefanija, ProSensing Inc., Amherst, MA; J. B. Mead, A. L. Pazmany

9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Poster Session 11: ORGANIZED CONVECTION AND SEVERE PHENOMENA: POSTERS 2. –Zurich DeFG

Organizer(s): Angela K. Rowe, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA, Timothy J. Lang, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL

215 SevereWeatherIdentificationUsingPolarimetricRadarandMachineLearningTechniques. Cesar Beneti, SIMEPAR - Parana Meteorological System, Curitiba, Brazil; T. Silva, P. H. Siqueira, M. F. Buzzi, L. Calvetti

216 High-SpatiotemporalDual-PolarizationRadarObservationsforaTornadoCaseinKorea. Sanghun Lim, Korea Institute of Civil Engineering and Building Technology, Goyang-si, Korea, Republic of (South); S. Allabakash, B. J. Jang, H. Kim, V. Chandrasekar

217 RadarReflectivitySignaturesAssociatedwiththeEnvelopedEyewallLightningSignaturesof2016SuperTyphoonsNepartakandMeranti. Chris Vagasky, Vaisala Inc, Louisville, CO; R. L. Holle

218 ComparisonofScatteringPropertiesofRealHailstonesandSpheroids. Zhiyuan Jiang, Penn State, Univ. Park, PA; M. R. Kumjian, R. S. Schrom, I. M. Giammanco, T. M. Brown-Giammanco, H. E. Estes, R. Maiden, A. J. Heymsfield

219 IdentificationofDual-PolarizationC-BandRadarSignaturestoImproveConvectiveWindNowcastingatCapeCanaveralAirForceStationandNASAKennedySpaceCenter. Corey G. Amiot, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; L. D. Carey, W. P. Roeder, T. M. McNamara, R. J. Blakeslee

220 Gap-FillingMobileRadarObservationsofaSnowSquallintheSanLuisValley. Andrew A. Rosenow, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; K. W. Howard, J. Meitín

221 AnOverviewofHailDetectionTechniquesUsingSHAVEHailReports. Kiel L. Ortega, OU/CIMMS and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK

222 CreatingaClimatologicalDatabaseofThree-DimensionalRadarMosaicswithDerivedSevereWeatherProducts:Progress,Challenges,andMovingForward. Kiel L. Ortega, OU/CIMMS and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; A. E. Reinhart, B. R. Smith, D. M. Kingfield

223 EarlyOperationalSuccessesoftheUniv.ofLouisianaatMonroe’sS-bandPolarimetricDopplerRadar. Todd A. Murphy, Univ. of Louisiana, Monroe, LA; C. Entremont, B. Hughes, J. D. Lamb, M. B. Mayeaux

224 Rapid-ScanDual-PolarizationWSR-88DObservationsofOklahomaHailstormson26March2017. Arthur Witt, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; C. M. Kuster

225 ExaminingTornadicandNon-TornadicStormsUsingHigh-ResolutionSatelliteImageryandDual-PolarizationRadar. Thea Sandmael, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; C. R. Homeyer

226 AssessingTornadicPotentialinNonsupercellStormsByQuantifyingtheSeparationofZDRandKDPEnhancementRegions. Scott Loeffler, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; M. R. Kumjian

227 SevereThunderstormLifeCyclesintheNortheastU.S. Matthew Wunsch, Stony Brook Univ., Stony Brook, NY; M. M. French

228 CloselySpacedX-bandDual-WavelengthDual-PolarizationSignaturesinMeltingHail. Matthew R. Kumjian, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; Y. P. Richardson, T. Meyer, K. A. Kosiba, J. M. Wurman

229 AirborneRadarObservationsofRainbandStructureinHurricaneOphelia(2005). Naufal Razin, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; M. M. Bell

230 Sub-RainbandStructureandDynamicCharacteristicsinthePrincipleRainbandofTyphoonHagupit(2008). Wen-Chau Lee, NCAR, Boulder, CO; X. Tang, M. M. Bell

231 PolarimetricWeatherRadarAnalysesoftheChristmasFreezingRainStormatViennaInternationalAirport. Rudolf Kaltenboeck, Austro Control, Innsbruck, Austria; A. Ryzhkov

232 HailClimatologiesforSydneyandBrisbane,Australia,DerivedfromSingle-PolarizationRadarandInsuranceClaimData. Robert A. Warren, Monash Univ., Melbourne, Australia; J. R. Peter, H. A. Ramsay, S. T. Siems, M. J. Manton, A. Protat

233 NovelPolarimetricRadarObservationsofUpscaleConvectiveGrowthneartheSierrasdeCórdoba. Jake Mulholland, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL; R. J. Trapp, S. W. Nesbitt, P. Salio, L. Vidal, M. Rugna

234 TheSpatiotemporalandStructuralCharacteristicsofSummerConvectivePrecipitationSystemsofTaiwan. Wei-Yu Chang, Chinese Culture Univ., Taipei, Taiwan; G. B. Wu

235 Tropopause-OvershootingConvectionfromGridRadRadarObservations. Cameron R. Homeyer, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; J. W. Cooney, K. P. Bowman

236 AnIdealizedSimulationofQuasi-LInearConvectiveSystemMesovorticesandPolarimetricRadarSignaturesAssociatedwithMesovortexGenesis. George Limpert, Univ. of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE; M. S. Van Den Broeke

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237 IdentifyingPolarimetricRadarSignaturesAloftAssociatedwithLargeandGiantHail. Jeffrey C. Snyder, Univ. of Oklahoma/CIMMS and NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; A. V. Ryzhkov, J. Krause

238 SignificantEventsObservedBytheMzzuX-BandDual-PolarizationRadarinItsFirst2YearsofOperation. Neil I. Fox, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia, MO; P. S. Market, J. Wilkerson

239 MesoscaleEnvironmentandInternalStructureofSevereColdSeasonQLCS’sovertheSoutheastU.S. Kevin R. Knupp, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; D. M. Conrad, C. A. Lisauckis, A. W. Lyza

240 VerificationoftheMESHProductovertheCanadianPrairiesUsingaHigh-QualitySurfaceHailReportDatasetSourcedfromSocialMedia. Neil Taylor, EC, Edmonton, AB, Canada; J. C. Brimelow

9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Poster Session 12: QUANTITATIVE PRECIPITATION ESTIMATION AND HYDROLOGY: POSTERS. –Zurich DeFG

241 EstimatingRadarBeamBlockingRatewithSub-MeterDEMsDerivedfromPléiadesSatellitesStereoscopicDataandAirborneLidarData. Dominique Faure, Météo France, Toulouse Cedex, France; I. Leonardi, G. Delrieu, N. Gaussiat

242 WITHDRAWN

243 ComparisonofAttenuationCorrectionAlgorithmsforSingle-PolarizedX-BandRadars. Katharina Lengfeld, Deutscher Wetterdienst, Offenbach am Main, Germany; M. Berenguer, D. Sempere-Torres

244 EnhancetheAccuracyofRadarSnowfallEstimationwithMultiNewZ-SRelationships. Youcun Qi, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; J. Zhang

245 VerificationofHydrometeorClassificationAlgorithmsfortheU.K.C-bandRadarNetwork. Ben S. Pickering, NERC, Leeds, U.K.

246 TechnicalChallengesinTransferringoftheR(A)MethodologyforRainfallEstimationtoOperationalSystems. Pengfei Zhang, CIMMS, Norman, OK; A. V. Ryzhkov, S. B. Cocks, L. Tang

247 UsingOperationalLDRMeasurementstoImproveRadarQuantitativePrecipitationEstimatesThroughAccurateClassificationoftheVerticalReflectivityProfile. Caroline Sandford, Met Office, Exeter, U.K.; A. J. Illingworth, R. J. Thompson, D. Harrison

248 QuantitativePrecipitationEstimationUsingX-bandPolarimetricRadarMeasurementsoverSouthernChina. Sheng Chen, Sun Yat-sen Univ., Guangzhou, China; H. Chen, A. Zhang, Z. Li, L. Yan, W. Yuan

249 ThePotentialofUsingCrowdsourcedAutomaticWeatherStationsforUrbanRainfallMonitoringinAmsterdam. Hidde Leijnse, KNMI, De Bilt, Netherlands; L. de Vos, A. Overeem, R. Uijlenhoet

250 EvaluationofS-BandRadarRainRateRetrievalAlgorithmsandPrecipitationVariabilityOveraDenseRainGaugeNetwork. David A. Marks, NASA/GSFC Wallops Flight Facility and SSAI, Wallops Island, VA; D. B. Wolff, C. S. Pabla, W. A. Petersen, P. E. Kirstetter, A. Tokay, J. L. Pippitt, J. Wang

251 GeographicPatternsofFine-scaleTRMMPRRainClimatologyandRetrievalUncertainties. Masafumi Hirose, Meijo Univ., Nagoya, Japan

252 DevelopmentandVerificationofRadar-SatelliteBlendedQPFtoRainfallForecasting. Sang-Min Jang, APEC Climate Center, Busan, Korea, Republic of (South); K. W. Park, S. K. Lee, S. K. Yoon

253 AStudyontheClimatologicalCharacteristicsofDSDinSoutheasternKorea. Geun-Hoo Kim, Pukyong National Univ., Busan, Korea, Republic of (South); D. I. Lee, S. H. Suh, H. J. Kim, M. Kang

254 RainfallEstimationbasedonHybridSurfaceReflectivityusingOperationalWeatherRadarsinKorea. Young-a Oh, KMA, Seoul, Korea, Republic of (South); S. H. Jung, M. K. Suk, S. K. Lee

255 PrecipitationInsightsFromVerticallyPointingRadar,SurveillanceRadarandDisdrometersDuringtheTwo-YearGoAmazon2014/5Campaign. Scott E. Giangrande, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY; D. Wang, Z. Feng, J. C. Hardin

256 ImprovingQuantitativePrecipitationEstimationbyCombiningSPOLRadarandRainGaugeNetworkOverSaoPauloMetropolitanArea. Kleber Lopes Rocha Filho, FCTH, Sao Paulo, Brazil; F. Conde, C. P. Andrioli, A. S. K. B. Sosnoski

257 OverlapofExtremeConvectiveIntensitiesandExtremeRainRatesfromTRMMandWSR-88DPerspectives. Adam C. Varble, Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT; A. C. Gingrey, E. Zipser

258 MeltingLayerImpactontheRadarRainfallEstimationUsingtheSpecificAttenuation. Lin Tang, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; J. Zhang, P. Zhang, A. V. Ryzhkov, S. B. Cocks, Y. Wang

259 ComparisonofQuantitativePrecipitationEstimationinNorthernTaiwanUsingS-andC-bandDual-polarimetricRadars. Wei-Yu Chang, Chinese Culture Univ., Taipei, Taiwan; J. Y. Chen, T. C. Wang

260 ComparativeEvaluationofRaingauge-AdjustedRadarRainfall(RAR)withDifferentRaingaugeProcess:TRMM-GSPvsWRC-RGP. Sangmi Lee, KMA, Seoul, Korea, Republic of (South); M. K. Suk, S. H. Jung, S. K. Lee

261 RegionalPolarimetricQuantitativePrecipitationEstimationOverNorthernCalifornia. Delbert Willie, Northern Arizona Univ., Flagstaff, AZ; H. Chen, V. Chandrasekar, R. Cifelli

262 RadarQuantitativePrecipitationEstimationfortheIdentificationofDebris-FlowOccurrenceoverSichuanRegioninChina. Zhao Si, Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environment, CAS, Chengdu, China; V. Chandrasekar

263 PolarimetricRadarQPEBasedonaNewDifferentialPhase-BasedVariationalApproach. Hao Huang, Nanjing Univ., Nanjing, China; K. Zhao, G. Zhang

264 WITHDRAWN

265 TheImpactofDifferentPrecipitationTypesonthePolarimetricRadarQPEUsingSpecificAttenuation. Yadong Wang, Southern Illinois Univ., Edwardsville, IL; J. Zhang, P. Zhang, A. V. Ryzhkov, C. Fritts

266 ComparingPhysically-BasedHydrologicModelStreamflowSimulationsforaSmallMixed-LandUseCatchmentUtilizingS-andX-BandDual-PolarizationRadarsandTerrestrialBasedTippingBuckets. Micheal J. Simpson, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia, MO; N. I. Fox

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9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Poster Session 13: RADAR NETWORKS, QUALITY CONTROL, PROCESSING AND SOFTWARE: POSTERS 2. –Zurich DeFG

267 QualityAnalysisofthe2016QuantitativePrecipitationEstimatesintheFrenchAlps. Dominique Faure, Météo France, Toulouse cedex, France; N. Gaussiat, P. Dupuy, G. Delrieu, N. Yu, F. Sarter

268 3DWindFieldEstimationwithHigherSpatialResolutionUsingMultiCompactX-BandWeatherRadars. Masahiro Minowa, Furuno Electric Co., LTD., Nishinomiya, Japan; Y. Takashima, T. Takaki, S. Oishi, E. Nakakita

269 WindTurbineIssuesinGermany. Tim Böhme, Deutscher Wetterdienst, Offenbach, Germany; J. E. E. Seltmann

270 DesignandImplementationofRadarNetworksinSomeOtherCountrieswithSupportofFinnishMeteorologicalInstitute. Ljubov Joanna Liman, Finnish Meteorological Institute, Helsinki, Finland; H. Pietarila

271 AssessmentWindTurbineRepoweringonRadarDataQuality. Michael Frech, Deutscher Wetterdienst, Hohenpeißenberg, Germany; J. E. E. Seltmann

272 X-BandWeatherRadarNetworkinChengdu. Jianxin He, Chengdu Univ. of Information Technology, ChengDu, China; X. Li, L. Yang, S. Tang, S. Zhao, D. Su, Z. Yao

273 SensitivityofPolarimetricWeatherRadars. Richard L. Ice, Centuria Corporation, Norman, OK; L. M. Richardson, A. E. Daniel, A. K. Heck, A. D. Free, R. W. Macemon, J. C. Krause, J. N. Chrisman, M. Frech, J. C. Hubbert

274 ANovelMeasurementMatrixDesignforWeatherRadarBasedonCompressiveSensing. Qiangyu Zeng, Chengdu Univ. of Information Technology, Chengdu, China; C. V. Chandra, J. He, X. Li, H. Wang

275 CalibrationofSystemBiasinZHandZDRofS-bandDual-PolarizationRadar. Hae Lim Kim, Weather Radar Center, KMA, Seoul, Korea, Republic of (South); S. H. Jung, S. A. Jung, S. K. Lee

276 AnAlgorithmtoDetectSpuriousDifferentialPhasewithLargeOscillationintheRangeDirection. Biao Geng, JAMSTEC, Yokosuka, Japan; M. Katsumata

277 ObjectiveDeterminationofQualityParametersandClutterFilterNumberforOperationalS-bandDual-PolarizationRadar. Sung-Hwa Jung, KMA, Seoul, Korea, Republic of (South); M. K. Suk, K. Y. Nam, J. Y. Gu, S. K. Lee

278 ApplicationoftheCLEAN-APClutterFilterusingWETforImprovedQuantitativePrecipitationEstimation. Sam Lyons, UKMO, Exeter, U.K.; T. Darlington, S. Torres, D. A. Warde

279 AnalysisofVerticallyPointingMillimeterWaveRadarDataQualityattheARMEasternNorthAtlanticSite. Alyssa A. Matthews, PNNL, Richland, WA; B. M. Isom

280 ReplacementoftheCanadianWeatherRadarNetwork. Jim M.C. Young, EC, Toronto, ON, Canada

281 ThePhasePatternOfParabolicRadarAntennaAndDataQuality. Ya-Chien Feng, McGill Univ., Montreal, QC, Canada; F. Fabry

282 VelocityAmbiguityMitigationinNASAD3R. Shashank S Joshil, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO; V. Chandrasekar

283 TheDopplerOnWheelsandCSWRSurfaceObservationalFacility. Joshua Wurman, Center for Severe Weather Research, Boulder, CO; K. A. Kosiba, B. Pereira, T. Meyer, A. Frambach, P. Robinson, C. Laughlin, J. Marquis, T. White

9:30 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Poster Session 14: STUDIES OF NON-HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL RETURNS: POSTERS. –Zurich DeFG

284 BiologicalScatterersObservedbyS-Pol. John C. Hubbert, NCAR, Boulder, CO; J. W. Wilson

285 ThePolarimetricCharacteristicsofChaffUsingtheWSR-88DNetwork. James M. Kurdzo, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, MA; E. R. Williams, D. J. Smalley, B. J. Bennett, D. C. Patterson, M. S. Veillette, M. F. Donovan

286 DevelopmentofaNewInanimateClassfortheWSR-88DHydrometeorClassificationAlgorithm. James M. Kurdzo, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, MA; M. S. Veillette, B. J. Bennett, D. J. Smalley, E. R. Williams, M. F. Donovan

287 ElectricFieldOrientationofRadarChaff:ImplicationsforDual-PolarimetricRadarObservations. Earle R. Williams, MIT Lincoln Laboratory, Lexington, MA; J. M. Kurdzo, D. C. Patterson, D. J. Smalley, M. F. Donovan

288 AComparisonofAtmosphericProfilersandEnvironmentalSoundingsinComplexTerrainduringthe2017VORTEX-SEFieldCampaign. Ryan Wade, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; T. A. Murphy, D. D. Turner, T. R. Lee, M. Buban, P. Pangle, A. W. Lyza, K. R. Knupp

289 ImprovementofLongRangeDopplerLIDARsofMitsubishiElectricCorporation(MELCO). Ikuya Kakimoto, Mitsubishi Electric Corporation, Amagasaki-shi, Japan; Y. Kajiyama, J. S. Ha, H. I. Kim

290 WeatherRadarRefractivityVariabilityasaProxyofTurbulence. Ruben Hallali, IPSL, Guyancourt, France; J. Parent, J. Delanoë

291 DiurnalVariationofTurbulentEddyDissipationRateStudiedusing205MHzWindProfilerRadar. Santosh Kalathiparambil Raghavan, Advanced Centre for Atmospheric Radar Research, Cochin Univ. of Science and Technology, Cochin, India; A. Kottayil

292 TheRoleofDirectInsolationandNear-SurfaceMoistureAdvectionintheRecoveryofCAPEon31March2016duringVORTEX-Southeast. Allison T. LaFleur, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN; R. Tanamachi, S. J. Frasier, J. Waldinger, D. D. Turner

11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 21A: CLOUD STUDIES USING RADARS 2 –St. Gallen 3

Co-Chair(s): Maximilian Maahn, Colorado Univ. and NOAA/ESRL, Boulder, CO & Laura Riihimaki, PNNL, Richland, WA

11:00 a.m.21A.1 DrizzleDropSizeDistributionsinMarineWarmStratocumulusCloudsDerivedfromDopplerCloudRadarandLidar. Virendra Ghate, ANL, Lemont, IL; M. Cadeddu

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11:15 a.m.21A.2 CharacterizationofStratiformRainfallbyCloudProfilingRadarinthePeruvianAndes. Jairo M. Valdivia, Jose Faustino Sanchez Carrion National Univ., Huacho, Peru; E. E. Villalobos, S. P. Chavez, Y. Silva, D. E. Scipion

11:30 a.m.21A.3 BackscatterandPropagationObservationsofRadarandLidarinMarineCumulusClouds:SimulationsandMeasurements. J. Vivekanandan, NCAR, Boulder, CO; S. Ellis, M. Hayman, J. Jensen

11:45 a.m.21A.4 StudyofDopplerCorrectionAlgorithmforEarthCARECloudProfilingRadarusingStatisticsofGround-baseCloudRadar. Yuichi Ohno, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Koganei, Japan; H. Horie

11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 21B: ORGANIZED CONVECTION AND SEVERE PHENOMENA 3: PECAN –VeVey

Chair(s): Daniel M. Stechman, Univ. of Illinois, Urbana, IL, Kevin Knupp, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL

11:00 a.m.21B.1 AnExaminationofthe20June2015CovectiveInitiationEventduringPECAN. Brianna M. Lund, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL; K. Knupp

11:15 a.m.21B.2 NocturnalElevatedConvectiveStormInitiation:PECAN4JulyHailstorm. James W. Wilson, NCAR, Boulder, CO; D. W. Reif, R. D. Roberts, S. B. Trier, T. Weckwerth

11:30 a.m.21B.3 Kinematics,Thermodynamics,andMicrophysicsofthe25-26June2015KansasMCSduringPECAN. Rachel L. Miller, CIMMS, Norman, OK; C. L. Ziegler, M. I. Biggerstaff, A. A. Alford

11:45 a.m.21B.4 KinematicsandThermodynamicsofNocturnalTornadogenesisintheSevere5-6July2015SouthDakotaMCSDuringPECAN. Conrad L. Ziegler, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; M. I. Biggerstaff, M. C. Coniglio, M. D. Flournoy, E. R. Mansell, T. J. Schuur, R. L. Miller, A. A. Alford

11:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Session 21C: STUDIES OF NON-HYDROMETEOROLOGICAL RETURNS –St. Gallen 1&2

Co-Chair(s): Ya- Chein Feng, McGill Univ., Montreal, QC, Virendra Ghate, ANL, Lemont, IL

11:00 a.m.21C.1 ExplorationofRadar-BasedAlgorithmstoDevelopaClimatologyofWarmSeasonHorizontalConvectiveRolls. John R. Banghoff, Pennsylvania State Univ., Univ. Park, PA; M. R. Kumjian, D. J. Stensrud

11:15 a.m.21C.2 TheMostlyFailedInvasionoftheSouthShoreoftheSt-LawrenceRiverbySpruceBudwormMothson15-16July2013,itsMonitoringbyWeatherRadars,andLessonsLearnedRelevanttoWeatherSurveillance. Frédéric Fabry, McGill Univ., Montreal, QC, Canada; A. Kilambi, Y. Boulanger

11:30 a.m.21C.3 CSU-CHILLRadarObservationsofBraggScatteringEchoesinMountainWaveLeeFlow. Patrick C. Kennedy, Colorado State Univ., Ft. Collins, CO; S. A. Rutledge, R. S. Schumacher

11:45 a.m.21C.4 OntheRetrievalofVolcanicAshBulkParametersUsingPolarimetricWeatherRadars. Gianfranco Vulpiani, Presidency of the Council of Ministers, Rome, Italy; E. Guerriero, M. Ripepe

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m. Session 22A: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS 5: ICE HABIT AND HYDROMETEOR ID STUDIES –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Christopher R. Williams, CIRES/Univ. of Colorado, Boulder, CO, Matthew R. Kumjian, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK

1:30 p.m.22A.1 DynamicalandMicrophysicalCompositearoundTropicalConvectiveCoresasderivedfromHIWCAircraftObservationsandaSatelliteProduct. Alain Protat, Bureau of Meteorology, Docklands, Australia; S. Rauniyar, J. Delanoë, K. Bedka, C. R. Yost

1:45 p.m.22A.2 ObservationsofPeriodsinStratiformPrecipitationwithandwithoutaZDRPeakaroundthe-15CRegion. Jonathan M. Vogel, McGill Univ., Montreal, Canada; F. Fabry, I. Zawadzki

2:00 p.m.22A.3 TheOlympicMountainsExperiment(OLYMPEX):AnOpportunitytoExploreTerrain-InfluencedPrecipitationProcessesinMid-LatitudeCyclones. Angela K. Rowe, Univ. of Washington, Seattle, WA; M. M. Chaplin, T. M. Schuldt, J. Zagrodnik, R. A. Houze Jr., L. A. McMurdie

2:15 p.m.22A.4 Dual-polarizationRadarAnalysisofOrographicWintertimeCloudswithFreezingDrizzle. Sarah A. Tessendorf, NCAR, Boulder, CO; D. Serke, K. Ikeda

2:30 p.m.22A.5 Low-LevelSublimationofSnowfallontheAntarcticMarginsDuetoKatabaticWinds. Jacopo Grazioli, MeteoSwiss, Locarno, Switzerland; J. B. Madeleine, H. Gallée, R. Forbes, C. Genthon, G. Krinner, A. Berne

2:45 p.m.22A.6 EnhancingOurUnderstandingofDeepVersusShallowSnowfallMicrophysicswithGround-BasedObservations. Claire Pettersen, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison, WI; M. S. Kulie, W. A. Petersen, L. F. Bliven, A. Merrelli, M. Dutter, D. Beachler

3:00 p.m.22A.7 ParticleIdentificationforPolarimetricWeatherRadarUsingABayesianMethod. Hui Xiao, Institute of Atmospheric Physics(IAP),Chinese Academy of Sciences(CAS), Beijing, China; G. Wen, A. Protat

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3:15 p.m.22A.8 UnsupervisedClassificationofVerticalProfilesofDual-PolarizationRadarVariables. Jussi Tiira, Univ. of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland; D. Moisseev

1:30 p.m.–3:30 p.m. Session 22B: QUANTITATIVE PRECIPITATION ESTIMATION AND HYDROLOGY 1: MULTI-PLATFORM QPE. –St. Gallen 1&2

Co-Chair(s): Walter A. Petersen, Univ. of Alabama, Huntsville, AL, Amber E. Emory, NASA/GSFC, Greenbelt, MD

1:30 p.m.22B.1 RadarApplicationsinNorthernScotland:RAINS. Ryan R. Neely, Univ. of Leeds, Leeds, U.K.; L. Parry, L. J. Bennett, D. Dufton, C. G. Collier

1:45 p.m.22B.2 AnApproachtoRadar-RaingaugeBlendingIncludingtheTimeDimension. Marc Berenguer, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain; D. Sempere-Torres

2:00 p.m.22B.3 MRMSDual-PolarizationRadarSyntheticQPE. Jian Zhang, NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK; Y. Qi, L. Tang, S. B. Cocks, Y. Wang, P. Zhang, A. Ryzhkov, C. Langston, B. T. Kaney

2:15 p.m.22B.4 ProbabilisticQuantitativePrecipitationEstimateswithGroundandSpace-basedRadars. Pierre-Emmanuel Kirstetter, NOAA/NSSL, Univ. of Oklahoma, Norman, OK; J. J. Gourley, J. Zhang

2:30 p.m.22B.5 Long-TermAssessmentoftheDPRRainfallProductsintheMediterraneanAreaAccordingtotheH-SAFValidationProtocol. Marco Petracca, Presidency of the Council of Ministers, Rome, Italy; S. Puca, S. Sebastianelli, G. Vulpiani

2:45 p.m.22B.6 ExamininganAlternativeNormalizationofDropSizeDistributionsandItsUtilityforSpaceborneRadarRetrievalsofRain. Kwo-Sen Kuo, NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, MD; A. Tokay, S. Yatheendradas

3:00 p.m.22B.7 OntheRoadtoOperationalRainfallMonitoringwithCommercialMicrowaveLinks. Hidde Leijnse, KNMI, De Bilt, Netherlands; A. Overeem, R. Uijlenhoet

3:15 p.m.22B.8 DoestheImplementationofaNearbyX-bandDual-polarimetricRadarImproveRainfallEstimatesfromDistantS-bandWSR-88D’s?AnIn-DepthAnalysis. Micheal J. Simpson, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia, MO; N. I. Fox

4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m. Session 23A: MICROPHYSICAL STUDIES WITH RADARS 6: HYDROMETEOR DISTRIBUTION STUDIES –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Marcus van Lier-Walqui, Univ. of Miami/RSMAS, Miami, FL, Daniel T. Dawson, Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN

4:00 p.m.23A.1 EvaluationofSingle-andDual-WavelengthRadarRainRetrievalAlgorithmsbyUsingMeasuredDSD. Liang Liao, Morgan State Univ., Greenbelt, MD; R. Meneghini, A. Tokay

4:15 p.m.23A.2 SimultaneousObservationsofCloudsandPrecipitationusingC-BandandKa-BandRadar. Martin Hagen, DLR, Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany; Q. Li, F. Ewald, T. Zinner

4:30 p.m.23A.3 RaindropSizeDistributionfromaSlantProfilingRadar:AssessmentAnalysis. Christine Unal, Delft Univ. of Technology, Delft, Netherlands

4:45 p.m.23A.4 CharacterizationofRainMicrophysicalProcessesfromtheCombinationofDopplerSpectraObservedbyDualFrequencyCloudRadars. Frederic Tridon, Univ. of Leicester, Leicester, U.K.; A. Battaglia, D. Watters

5:00 p.m.23A.5 CombinedAnalysisofTriple-FrequencyCloudRadarandPolarimetricX-BandRadarObservationsofSnowandIceMicrophysics. Davide Ori, Univ. of Cologne, Köln, Germany; S. Kneifel, J. Dias Neto, S. Trömel, R. Evaristo, J. Handwerker, B. Bohn

5:15 p.m.23A.6 RaindropSizeDistributionsandVerticalWindsviaaRaindrop-ResolvingSingle-DopplerPulseCompressionRadar. Paul R. Harasti, NRL, Monterey, CA; J. M. Schmidt, P. J. Flatau

4:00 p.m.–5:30 p.m. Session 23B: RADAR NETWORKS, QUALITY CONTROL, PROCESSING AND SOFTWARE 2 –St. Gallen 1&2

Co-Chair(s): Adrian Loftus, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO, Iosif Andrei Lindenmaier, PNNL, Richland, WA

4:00 p.m.23B.1 TheEffectofIntra-VolumeScansonMRMSDerivedProductsUsingNumericallySimulatedRadarData. Anthony E. Reinhart, OU/CIMMS & NOAA/OAR/NSSL, Norman, OK; D. M. Kingfield, K. L. Ortega

4:15 p.m.23B.2 ClimatologicalBeamPropagationConditionsforChina’sWeatherRadarsNetwork. Hongyan Wang, Chinese Academy of Meteorological Sciences, Beijing, China

4:30 p.m.23B.3 TheRelativeCalibrationAdjustmentTechniqueforCalibratingAustralianOperationalRadarsinNearReal-Time. Valentin Louf, Bureau of Meteorology, Melbourne, Australia; A. Protat, C. Jakob, S. Rauniyar, R. A. Warren

4:45 p.m.23B.4 UsingDataQualitytoImproveComparisonbetweenGPMMeasurementsandGroundRadars. Irene Crisologo, Univ. of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany; R. A. Warren, K. Muehlbauer, M. Heistermann

5:00 p.m.23B.5 AZDRCalibrationCheckUsingHydro-MeteorsintheIcePhase. Michael J. Dixon, NCAR, Boulder, CO; J. C. Hubbert, S. Ellis

5:15 p.m.23B.6 DevelopmentandValidationofAReal-timeHailSystemUsingHigh-ResolutionPolarimetricRadarNetworkObservations. Haonan Chen, Colorado State Univ., Ft. Collins, CO; V. Chandrasekar 20

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Friday, September 017:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. Registration–Monte Rosa Reg.

Desk

10:00 a.m.–10:30 a.m. Coffee Break–2nd Floor Prefunction

10:30 a.m.–11:15 a.m. Conference Concludes8:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Session 24A: QUANTITATIVE PRECIPITATION ESTIMATION AND HYDROLOGY 2: IMPROVEMENTS AND APPLICATION OF RADAR-BASED QPE. –St. Gallen

Co-Chair(s): David B. Wolff, NASA/GSFC, Wallops Island, VA, Jian Zhang, CIMMS/Univ. of Oklahoma and NOAA/NSSL, Norman, OK

8:30 a.m.24A.1 CorrectionofRadarReflectivityDuetoPartialBeamBlocking. Anthony J. Illingworth, Univ. of Reading, Reading, U.K.; R. J. Thompson

8:45 a.m.24A.2 TowardanEnsembleRadarPrecipitationEstimationBasedonaDynamicDescriptionoftheMeasurementErrors. Maud Martet, Meteo France, Toulouse, France; G. Thomas, N. Gaussiat

9:00 a.m.24A.3 TowardsAssessingtheInformationContentofRadarPolarimetryMeasurements. Laura Fierce, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY; S. Giangrande, R. L. McGraw

9:15 a.m.24A.4 CombinedUseofRadarVolumeScansandHigh-ResolutionNWPModelOutputforBetterQuantitativePrecipitationEstimationsoverPlainandMountainousAreas. Tony Le Bastard, Météo France, Toulouse, France; O. Caumont, N. Gaussiat, F. Karbou

9:30 a.m.24A.5 UseofOPERADataforReal-TimePan-EuropeanFlash-FloodHazardAssessmentandNowcasting. Shinju Park, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC), Barcelona, Spain; M. Berenguer, D. Sempere-Torres

9:45 a.m.24A.6 ImprovingAccuracyofQuantitativePrecipitationEstimatesatTheClimateCorporation. Nick Guy, The Climate Corporation, Seattle, WA

8:30 a.m.–10:00 a.m. Session 24B: RADAR NETWORKS, QUALITY CONTROL, PROCESSING AND SOFTWARE 3 –VeVey

Co-Chair(s): Francesc Junyent, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO, Michael M. Bell, Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO

8:30 a.m.24B.1 Real-timeQualityControlofPhasedArrayWeatherRadarDataObservedEvery30Seconds. Shinsuke Satoh, National Institute of Information and Communications Technology, Koganei, Japan; F. Isoda, T. Sano, H. Hanado, T. Ushio, S. Otsuka, T. Miyoshi

8:45 a.m.24B.2 ASimpleMethodforSeparatingWeatherfromNon-WeatherechoesonDual-PolarizationRadars. Alamelu Kilambi, McGill Univ., Montreal, QC, Canada; F. Fabry

9:00 a.m.24B.3 AccountingforAttenuationofX-BandDual-PolarizationRadarDataDuetoRadomeWetting. Neil I. Fox, Univ. of Missouri, Columbia, MO; J. Wilkerson

9:15 a.m.24B.4 PolarimetricWeatherRadarCalibrationwithaTargetSimulator. Marc Schneebeli, Palindrome Remote Sensing, Grüsch, Switzerland

9:30 a.m.24B.5 ModelingofZdrBiasDuetoAntennaTemperature. John C. Hubbert, NCAR, Boulder, CO; R. Jørgensen, C. Cappellin, M. J. Dixon

9:45 a.m.24B.6 Object-basedFilterDesignforSpectralPolarimetricWeatherRadar. Jiapeng Yin, Delft Univ. of Technology, Delft, Netherlands; C. M. H. Unal, H. W. J. Russchenberg

10:30 a.m.–10:45 a.m. Plenary Session 25: AWARDS PRESENTATION –VeVey

Speaker(s): Katharina Lengfeld, Deutscher Wetterdienst, Barcelona, Germany

10:45 a.m.–11:00 a.m. Plenary Session 26: INFORMATION REGARDING THE NEXT EUROPEAN RADAR CONFERENCE. –VeVey

Speaker(s): Remko Uijlenhoet, Wageningen Univ., Wageningen, Netherlands, Hidde Leijnse, KNMI, De Bilt, Netherlands

11:00 a.m.–11:15 a.m. Plenary Session 27: CLOSING REMARKS. –VeVey

Speaker(s): Scott Collis, ANL, Argonne, IL, Scott Ellis, NCAR, Boulder, CO, Ali Tokay, Univ. of Maryland, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD

Conference Adjourns

Thank you to our sponsors!

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

AAdachi, T. 12B.2 Tue 10:45 AMAdams, I. S. 18B.2 Wed 9:15 AMAikins, J. 110 Tue 2:30 PMAl Sakka, H. 170 Tue 2:30 PMAlexander, C. 19B.2 Wed 10:45 AMAlford, A. A. 12B.3 Tue 11:00 AMAmiot, C. G. 219 Thu 9:30 AMAugros, C. 2 Mon 2:30 PMAugros, C. 19B.5 Wed 11:30 AM

BBalaji, M. S. 180 Tue 2:30 PMBaldini, L. 117 Tue 2:30 PMBanghoff, J. R. 21C.1 Thu 11:00 AMBattaglia, A. KS4.1 Mon 9:30 AMBattaglia, A. 18A.4 Wed 9:45 AMBauer-Pfundstein, M. R. 192 Thu 9:30 AMBauer-Pfundstein, M. R. 77 Mon 2:30 PMBeer, J. 21 Mon 2:30 PMBell, M. M. 18C.4 Wed 9:45 AMBeneti, C. 215 Thu 9:30 AMBerenguer, M. 22B.2 Thu 1:45 PMBerne, A. 40 Mon 2:30 PMBerne, A. 13A.4 Tue 2:15 PMBesic, N. 18B.3 Wed 9:30 AMBest, S. 106 Tue 2:30 PMBharadwaj, N. 15B.4 Tue 4:45 PMBharadwaj, N. 100 Tue 2:30 PMBlahak, U. KS3.1 Mon 9:00 AMBluestein, H. B. 20B.6 Thu 9:15 AMBodine, D. J. 141 Tue 2:30 PMBodine, D. J. 20B.2 Thu 8:15 AMBöhme, T. 269 Thu 9:30 AMBorderies, M. 13A.1 Tue 1:30 PMBorque, P. 19A.3 Wed 11:00 AMBozell, J. 7A.5 Mon 5:00 PMBrown, W. O. J. 138 Tue 2:30 PMBukovcic, P. 13 Mon 2:30 PMBurke, A. R. 162 Tue 2:30 PM

CCai, H. 6B.3 Mon 2:00 PMCalheiros, R. V. 26 Mon 2:30 PMCannon, F. 7B.5 Mon 5:00 PMCarlin, J. 99 Tue 2:30 PMCarlin, J. 13A.2 Tue 1:45 PMCastro, R. 163 Tue 2:30 PMCha, T. Y. 12B.6 Tue 11:45 AMChandrasekar, V. KS17.1 Wed 8:30 AMChang, W. Y. 234 Thu 9:30 AMChang, W. Y. 259 Thu 9:30 AMChase, R. J. 19 Mon 2:30 PMChen, G. 74 Mon 2:30 PMChen, H. 23B.6 Thu 5:15 PMChen, S. 248 Thu 9:30 AMCho, J. Y. N. 20A.3 Thu 8:30 AM

C (cont.)Chung, K. S. 19B.6 Wed 11:45 AMClayton, A. W. 165 Tue 2:30 PMColeman, T. A. 158 Tue 2:30 PMColeman, T. A. 185 Thu 9:30 AMCollis, S. 18C.1 Wed 9:00 AMConrad, D. M. 20B.3 Thu 8:30 AMCooper, S. J. 18 Mon 2:30 PMCrisologo, I. 23B.4 Thu 4:45 PMCurtis, C. 211 Thu 9:30 AM

DD’Adderio, L. P. 41 Mon 2:30 PMD’Adderio, L. P. 119 Tue 2:30 PMDavis, T. 29 Mon 2:30 PMDawson, D. T. II 12 Mon 2:30 PMDidlake, A. C. Jr. 96 Tue 2:30 PMDidlake, A. C. Jr. 6A.3 Mon 2:00 PMDixon, M. 182 Tue 2:30 PMDixon, M. J. 23B.5 Thu 5:00 PMDolan, B. 13B.3 Tue 2:00 PMDolman, B. K. 64 Mon 2:30 PMDoviak, R. 12A.3 Tue 11:00 AMDreisewerd, R. J. 58 Mon 2:30 PM

EEllis, S. 6A.5 Mon 2:15 PMEmory, A. E. 264 Thu 9:30 AMEmory, A. E. 155 Tue 2:30 PMEngel, A. J. 7A.2 Mon 4:15 PMEvaristo, R. M. 51 Mon 2:30 PM

FFabry, F. 20A.4 Thu 8:45 AMFabry, F. 21C.2 Thu 11:15 AMFang, M. 56 Mon 2:30 PMFaure, D. 241 Thu 9:30 AMFaure, D. 267 Thu 9:30 AMFeist, M. M. 68 Mon 2:30 PMFeitosa, O. 47 Mon 2:30 PMFeng, Y. C. 281 Thu 9:30 AMFeng, Y. C. 70 Mon 2:30 PMFeng, Z. 149 Tue 2:30 PMFerreira, R. 71 Mon 2:30 PMFierce, L. 24A.3 Fri 9:00 AMFigueras i Ventura, J. 173 Tue 2:30 PMFinlon, J. A. 10 Mon 2:30 PMFoerster, A. M. 12B.4 Tue 11:15 AMFox, N. I. 238 Thu 9:30 AMFox, N. I. 24B.3 Fri 9:00 AMFrech, M. 271 Thu 9:30 AMFrench, M. M. 5B.2 Mon 10:45 AMFriedlein, M. 164 Tue 2:30 PMFulton, C. 126 Tue 2:30 PMFurukawa, K. 114 Tue 2:30 PMFurukawa, K. 207 Thu 9:30 AM

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

GGama, A. L. 172 Tue 2:30 PMGao, J. 19B.1 Wed 10:30 AMGatlin, P. N. 5A.6 Mon 11:45 AMGeerts, B. 18B.4 Wed 9:45 AMGeng, B. 276 Thu 9:30 AMGhate, V. 21A.1 Thu 11:00 AMGiangrande, S. E. 255 Thu 9:30 AMGomi, K. 131 Tue 2:30 PMGoudeau, B. 160 Tue 2:30 PMGrazioli, J. 174 Tue 2:30 PMGrazioli, J. 22A.5 Thu 2:30 PMGriffin, C. B. 139 Tue 2:30 PMGriffin, E. M. 8 Mon 2:30 PMGuimond, S. R. 12B.1 Tue 10:30 AMGuimond, S. R. 38 Mon 2:30 PMGuy, N. 24A.6 Fri 9:45 AM

HHagen, M. 23A.2 Thu 4:15 PMHagihara, Y. 193 Thu 9:30 AMHallali, R. 290 Thu 9:30 AMHan, J. 57 Mon 2:30 PMHan, L. 5B.4 Mon 11:15 AMHan, M. 23 Mon 2:30 PMHandler, S. 92 Tue 2:30 PMHAOJUN, C. 169 Tue 2:30 PMHarasti, P. R. 176 Tue 2:30 PMHarasti, P. R. 23A.6 Thu 5:15 PMHardin, J. C. 183 Tue 2:30 PMHardin, J. C. 18C.3 Wed 9:30 AMHe, J. 272 Thu 9:30 AMHeberling, W. 123 Tue 2:30 PMHeymsfield, G. M. 109 Tue 2:30 PMHeymsfield, G. M. 156 Tue 2:30 PMHickman, B. S. 50 Mon 2:30 PMHirose, M. 251 Thu 9:30 AMHomeyer, C. R. 235 Thu 9:30 AMHorie, H. 132 Tue 2:30 PMHouser, J. B. KS10.1 Tue 9:00 AMHuang, H. 263 Thu 9:30 AMHubbert, J. C. 284 Thu 9:30 AMHubbert, J. C. 24B.5 Fri 9:30 AMHulsey, C. B. 20B.4 Thu 8:45 AMHunzinger, A. 87 Tue 2:30 PM

IIce, R. L. 273 Thu 9:30 AMIguchi, T. 34 Mon 2:30 PMIguchi, T. 7B.2 Mon 4:15 PMIllingworth, A. J. 24A.1 Fri 8:30 AMIsom, B. M. 194 Thu 9:30 AMIvic, I. R. 127 Tue 2:30 PMIvic, I. R. 130 Tue 2:30 PM

JJackson, R. 151 Tue 2:30 PMJacques, D. 19B.7 Wed 12:00 PMJang, M. 60 Mon 2:30 PMJang, S. M. 252 Thu 9:30 AMJaniszeski, A. 6A.1 Mon 1:30 PMJensen, M. 69 Mon 2:30 PMJeong, J. H. 65 Mon 2:30 PMJiang, H. 186 Thu 9:30 AMJiang, Z. 14A.2 Tue 4:15 PMJiang, Z. 218 Thu 9:30 AMJorgensen, D. P. 6A.2 Mon 1:45 PMJoshil, S. S. 282 Thu 9:30 AMJung, S. H. 277 Thu 9:30 AMJunyent, F. 30 Mon 2:30 PM

KKakimoto, I. 289 Thu 9:30 AMKaltenboeck, R. 63 Mon 2:30 PMKaltenboeck, R. 231 Thu 9:30 AMKaneko, Y. 120 Tue 2:30 PMKang, M. 98 Tue 2:30 PMKashiwayanagi, T. 129 Tue 2:30 PMKatsumata, M. 13B.1 Tue 1:30 PMKawamura, S. 15B.1 Tue 4:00 PMKe, C. Y. 66 Mon 2:30 PMKennedy, P. C. 21C.3 Thu 11:30 AMKenyon, A. L. 19A.2 Wed 10:45 AMKikuchi, H. 128 Tue 2:30 PMKilambi, A. 24B.2 Fri 8:45 AMKim, G. H. 253 Thu 9:30 AMKim, H. L. 275 Thu 9:30 AMKim, H. 33 Mon 2:30 PMKirstetter, P. E. 22B.4 Thu 2:15 PMKnupp, K. R. 239 Thu 9:30 AMKobayashi, T. 103 Tue 2:30 PMKosiba, K. A. 20B.1 Thu 8:00 AMKosiba, K. A. 143 Tue 2:30 PMKosiba, K. A. 144 Tue 2:30 PMKovalev, D. A. 45 Mon 2:30 PMKulie, M. S. 7B.6 Mon 5:15 PMKumar, M. 20A.5 Thu 9:00 AMKumjian, M. R. 228 Thu 9:30 AMKuo, K. S. 22B.6 Thu 2:45 PMKurdzo, J. M. 285 Thu 9:30 AMKurdzo, J. M. 286 Thu 9:30 AMKuster, C. M. 19A.5 Wed 11:30 AM

LLaFleur, A. T. 292 Thu 9:30 AMLang, T. J. 19A.1 Wed 10:30 AMLang, T. J. 18C.2 Wed 9:15 AMLauridsen, M. J. 6B.4 Mon 2:15 PMLe, M. 101 Tue 2:30 PMLe Bastard, T. 24A.4 Fri 9:15 AMLee, D. I. 9 Mon 2:30 PMLee, G. 191 Thu 9:30 AMLee, G. 5A.5 Mon 11:30 AMLee, G. 75 Mon 2:30 PM

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

L (cont.)Lee, G. 31 Mon 2:30 PMLee, G. 212 Thu 9:30 AMLee, S. 260 Thu 9:30 AMLee, W. C. 230 Thu 9:30 AMLeifer, M. C. 12A.2 Tue 10:45 AMLeijnse, H. 249 Thu 9:30 AMLeijnse, H. 22B.7 Thu 3:00 PMLeinonen, J. KS2.1 Mon 8:30 AMLengfeld, K. 243 Thu 9:30 AMLi, L. 7B.1 Mon 4:00 PMLiao, L. 23A.1 Thu 4:00 PMLim, S. 216 Thu 9:30 AMLiman, L. J. 270 Thu 9:30 AMLimpert, G. 236 Thu 9:30 AMLindenmaier, I. A. 208 Thu 9:30 AMLiou, Y. C. 140 Tue 2:30 PMLoeffler, S. 226 Thu 9:30 AMLoew, E. 206 Thu 9:30 AMLosey, A. D. 167 Tue 2:30 PMLouf, V. 23B.3 Thu 4:30 PMLouf, V. 184 Tue 2:30 PMLuke, E. P. 18A.3 Wed 9:30 AMLund, B. M. 21B.1 Thu 11:00 AMLyons, S. 278 Thu 9:30 AMLyza, A. W. 159 Tue 2:30 PMLyza, A. W. 20B.5 Thu 9:00 AM

MMaahn, M. 18A.2 Wed 9:15 AMMaesaka, T. 190 Thu 9:30 AMMahre, A. 142 Tue 2:30 PMMarchi, A. 16 Mon 2:30 PMMarks, D. A. 250 Thu 9:30 AMMarquis, J. 157 Tue 2:30 PMMartet, M. 24A.2 Fri 8:45 AMMartinkus, C. 13A.3 Tue 2:00 PMMasaki, T. 37 Mon 2:30 PMMatrosov, S. 91 Tue 2:30 PMMatrosov, S. Y. 15 Mon 2:30 PMMatthews, A. A. 279 Thu 9:30 AMMatyas, C. J. 153 Tue 2:30 PMMcCarthy, N. 13B.4 Tue 2:15 PMMead, J. 195 Thu 9:30 AMMead, J. B. 20A.2 Thu 8:15 AMMedina, B. L. 148 Tue 2:30 PMMelnikov, V. 20A.6 Thu 9:15 AMMeneghini, R. 36 Mon 2:30 PMMeyer, T. C. 5B.6 Mon 11:45 AMMiller, R. L. 21B.3 Thu 11:30 AMMin, K. H. 48 Mon 2:30 PMMinowa, M. 268 Thu 9:30 AMMirkovic, D. 12A.5 Tue 11:30 AMMohanakumar, K. 133 Tue 2:30 PMMoore, J. A. 124 Tue 2:30 PMMorales, C. A. 177 Tue 2:30 PMMorris, K. R. 118 Tue 2:30 PMMróz, K. 19A.8 Wed 12:15 PM

M (cont.)Mulholland, J. 233 Thu 9:30 AMMunchak, S. J. 105 Tue 2:30 PMMurphy, A. M. 88 Tue 2:30 PMMurphy, T. A. 223 Thu 9:30 AMMurphy, T. A. 150 Tue 2:30 PMMyagkov, A. 93 Tue 2:30 PMMyagkov, A. 83 Tue 2:30 PM

NNagaya, T. 189 Thu 9:30 AMNagumo, N. 102 Tue 2:30 PMNagumo, N. 14 Mon 2:30 PMNai, F. 209 Thu 9:30 AMNeely, R. R. III 22B.1 Thu 1:30 PMNesbitt, S. W. 19A.7 Wed 12:00 PMNguyen, C. 89 Tue 2:30 PMNguyen, C. 137 Tue 2:30 PMNishimura, K. 136 Tue 2:30 PMNotaros, B. M. 14A.4 Tue 4:45 PM

OOh, Y. A. 254 Thu 9:30 AMOhno, Y. 43 Mon 2:30 PMOhno, Y. 21A.4 Thu 11:45 AMOkazaki, A. 53 Mon 2:30 PMOri, D. 82 Tue 2:30 PMOri, D. 23A.5 Thu 5:00 PMOrtega, K. L. 221 Thu 9:30 AMOrtega, K. L. 222 Thu 9:30 AMOrzel, K. 15B.3 Tue 4:30 PMOue, M. 18B.1 Wed 9:00 AM

PPabla, C. S. 111 Tue 2:30 PMPark, S. 24A.5 Fri 9:30 AMPazmany, A. L. 199 Thu 9:30 AMPepyne, D. L. 12A.4 Tue 11:15 AMPérez Hortal, A. A. 46 Mon 2:30 PMPetersen, W. A. 7B.4 Mon 4:45 PMPetracca, M. 22B.5 Thu 2:30 PMPettersen, C. 22A.6 Thu 2:45 PMPeura, M. 168 Tue 2:30 PMPeura, M. 52 Mon 2:30 PMPickering, B. S. 245 Thu 9:30 AMPinkney, K. 85 Tue 2:30 PMPopStefanija, I. 214 Thu 9:30 AMPorcacchia, L. 4 Mon 2:30 PMPrateek, G. V. 213 Thu 9:30 AMPraz, C. 81 Tue 2:30 PMProtat, A. 22A.1 Thu 1:30 PMPu, Z. 19B.3 Wed 11:00 AM

QQi, Y. Sr. 244 Thu 9:30 AM

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

RRaghavan, S. K. 291 Thu 9:30 AMRauniyar, S. 84 Tue 2:30 PMRauniyar, S. 200 Thu 9:30 AMRaupach, T. H. 5A.3 Mon 11:00 AMRazin, N. 229 Thu 9:30 AMReed, K. A. 12B.5 Tue 11:30 AMReeves, H. D. 61 Mon 2:30 PMReinhart, A. E. 23B.1 Thu 4:00 PMRibaud, J. F. 94 Tue 2:30 PMRiihimaki, L. D. KS9.1 Tue 8:30 AMRilling, R. A. 115 Tue 2:30 PMRoberts, R. 6B.1 Mon 1:30 PMRocha Filho, K. L. 256 Thu 9:30 AMRosenow, A. A. 220 Thu 9:30 AMRowe, A. K. 22A.3 Thu 2:00 PMRUAN, Z. 125 Tue 2:30 PMRyzhkov, A. V. 7A.6 Mon 5:15 PM

SSalazar, J. 15B.2 Tue 4:15 PMSandford, C. 247 Thu 9:30 AMSandmael, T. 225 Thu 9:30 AMSatoh, S. 24B.1 Fri 8:30 AMSaunders, P. E. 95 Tue 2:30 PMSchleiss, M. 5B.3 Mon 11:00 AMSchmidt, J. 18A.1 Wed 9:00 AMSchmidt, M. B. 7A.4 Mon 4:45 PMSchneebeli, M. 24B.4 Fri 9:15 AMSchrom, R. S. 14A.1 Tue 4:00 PMSchrom, R. S. 97 Tue 2:30 PMSchrom, R. S. 59 Mon 2:30 PMSchuur, T. J. 55 Mon 2:30 PMSchvartzman, D. 196 Thu 9:30 AMSerke, D. J. 6 Mon 2:30 PMSerke, D. J. 20 Mon 2:30 PMShinoda, T. 188 Thu 9:30 AMSi, Z. 262 Thu 9:30 AMSilva, Y. 72 Mon 2:30 PMSimpson, M. J. 22B.8 Thu 3:15 PMSimpson, M. J. 266 Thu 9:30 AMSkinner, P. 19A.6 Wed 11:45 AMSkinner, P. S. 76 Mon 2:30 PMSmalley, D. J. 107 Tue 2:30 PMSmith, B. R. 178 Tue 2:30 PMSmith, P. L. 27 Mon 2:30 PMSmith, P. L. 5A.1 Mon 10:30 AMSnyder, J. C. 237 Thu 9:30 AMSoderholm, J. S. 175 Tue 2:30 PMSpringer, A. C. 187 Thu 9:30 AMStechman, D. M. 145 Tue 2:30 PMStedronsky, R. 197 Thu 9:30 AMSteiger, S. M. 19A.4 Wed 11:15 AMStough, S. M. 7 Mon 2:30 PMSun, J. 19B.4 Wed 11:15 AM

TTakahashi, N. 39 Mon 2:30 PMTakano, T. 1 Mon 2:30 PMTan, H. 121 Tue 2:30 PMTanamachi, R. 7A.1 Mon 4:00 PMTang, J. 171 Tue 2:30 PMTang, L. 179 Tue 2:30 PMTang, L. 258 Thu 9:30 AMTang, S. 113 Tue 2:30 PMTaylor, N. 240 Thu 9:30 AMTeshiba, M. S. 202 Thu 9:30 AMTessendorf, S. A. 22A.4 Thu 2:15 PMThompson, E. J. 13B.2 Tue 1:45 PMThompson, R. J. 5A.4 Mon 11:15 AMThurai, M. 24 Mon 2:30 PMThurai, M. 5A.2 Mon 10:45 AMTian, J. 3 Mon 2:30 PMTian, L. 146 Tue 2:30 PMTiira, J. 22A.8 Thu 3:15 PMTokay, A. 116 Tue 2:30 PMTorres, S. M. 122 Tue 2:30 PMTridon, F. 67 Mon 2:30 PMTridon, F. 23A.4 Thu 4:45 PMTripp, A. W. 32 Mon 2:30 PMTroemel, S. 5 Mon 2:30 PMTsai, C. L. 152 Tue 2:30 PMTsai, C. C. 19B.8 Wed 12:15 PMTsai, P. S. 135 Tue 2:30 PMTyynela, J. 14A.3 Tue 4:30 PM

UUnal, C. 23A.3 Thu 4:30 PMUnal, C. 90 Tue 2:30 PMUshio, T. 12A.6 Tue 11:45 AM

VVagasky, C. 217 Thu 9:30 AMValdivia, J. M. 22 Mon 2:30 PMValdivia, J. M. 21A.2 Thu 11:15 AMvan den Heuvel, F. E. M. 80 Tue 2:30 PMvan Lier-Walqui, M. 7A.3 Mon 4:30 PMVaradarajan, R. 134 Tue 2:30 PMVarble, A. C. 257 Thu 9:30 AMVendrasco, E. P. 78 Mon 2:30 PMVidal, L. 154 Tue 2:30 PMVilardell Sanchez, J. 210 Thu 9:30 AMVivekanandan, J. 21A.3 Thu 11:30 AMVogel, J. M. 22A.2 Thu 1:45 PMVollbracht, D. 204 Thu 9:30 AMVollbracht, D. 205 Thu 9:30 AMvon Lerber, A. 86 Tue 2:30 PMVulpiani, G. 21C.4 Thu 11:45 AM

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

WWade, R. 288 Thu 9:30 AMWallace, R. 25 Mon 2:30 PMWang, H. 23B.2 Thu 4:15 PMWang, S. 35 Mon 2:30 PMWang, X. 201 Thu 9:30 AMWang, Y. 5B.5 Mon 11:30 AMWang, Y. 265 Thu 9:30 AMWarde, D. A. 198 Thu 9:30 AMWarren, R. A. 232 Thu 9:30 AMWarren, R. A. KS16.1 Wed 8:00 AMWarren, R. A. 181 Tue 2:30 PMWeber, M. E. KS8.1 Tue 8:00 AMWeckwerth, T. M. 166 Tue 2:30 PMWheatley, D. M. 73 Mon 2:30 PMWienhoff, Z. B. 147 Tue 2:30 PMWilliams, C. R. 7B.3 Mon 4:30 PMWilliams, C. R. 79 Tue 2:30 PMWilliams, E. 108 Tue 2:30 PMWilliams, E. R. 287 Thu 9:30 AMWillie, D. 261 Thu 9:30 AMWilson, J. W. 21B.2 Thu 11:15 AMWingo, S. M. 112 Tue 2:30 PMWitt, A. 224 Thu 9:30 AMWolde, M. 42 Mon 2:30 PMWolff, D. B. Sr. 104 Tue 2:30 PMWood, V. T. 49 Mon 2:30 PMWunsch, M. 227 Thu 9:30 AMWurman, J. 283 Thu 9:30 AM

XXiao, H. 11 Mon 2:30 PMXiao, H. 22A.7 Thu 3:00 PMXin, L. 6B.2 Mon 1:45 PMXu, Q. 54 Mon 2:30 PM

YYang, J. 28 Mon 2:30 PMYin, J. 203 Thu 9:30 AMYin, J. 24B.6 Fri 9:45 AMYokota, S. 44 Mon 2:30 PMYoshikawa, E. 20A.1 Thu 8:00 AMYoung, J. M. C. 280 Thu 9:30 AMYu, L. 62 Mon 2:30 PM

ZZeng, Q. 274 Thu 9:30 AMZhang, A. 242 Thu 9:30 AMZhang, J. 5B.1 Mon 10:30 AMZhang, J. 22B.3 Thu 2:00 PMZhang, P. 246 Thu 9:30 AMZhao, K. 17 Mon 2:30 PMZheng, Y. 161 Tue 2:30 PMZiegler, C. L. 21B.4 Thu 11:45 AMZrnic, D. S. 12A.1 Tue 10:30 AM

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

M T

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

M T

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

M T

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

M T

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

M T Skinner, P. S. 76 Mon 2:30 PM

Smalley, D. J. 107 Tue 2:30 PM

Smith, B. R. 178 Tue 2:30 PM

Smith, P. L. 27 Mon 2:30 PM

Smith, P. L. 5A.1 Mon 10:30 AM

Snyder, J. C. 237 Thu 9:30 AM

Soderholm, J. S. 175 Tue 2:30 PM

Springer, A. C. 187 Thu 9:30 AM

Stechman, D. M. 145 Tue 2:30 PM

Stedronsky, R. 197 Thu 9:30 AM

Steiger, S. M. 19A.4 Wed 11:15 AM

Stough, S. M. 7 Mon 2:30 PM

Sun, J. 19B.4 Wed 11:15 AM

T

Takahashi, N. 39 Mon 2:30 PM

Takano, T. 1 Mon 2:30 PM

Tan, H. 121 Tue 2:30 PM

Tanamachi, R. 7A.1 Mon 4:00 PM

Tang, J. 171 Tue 2:30 PM

Tang, L. 179 Tue 2:30 PM

Tang, L. 258 Thu 9:30 AM

Tang, S. 113 Tue 2:30 PM

Taylor, N. 240 Thu 9:30 AM

Teshiba, M. S. 202 Thu 9:30 AM

Tessendorf, S. A. 22A.4 Thu 2:15 PM

Thompson, E. J. 13B.2 Tue 1:45 PM

Thompson, R. J. 5A.4 Mon 11:15 AM

Thurai, M. 24 Mon 2:30 PM

Thurai, M. 5A.2 Mon 10:45 AM

Tian, J. 3 Mon 2:30 PM

Tian, L. 146 Tue 2:30 PM

Tiira, J. 22A.8 Thu 3:15 PM

Tokay, A. 116 Tue 2:30 PM

Torres, S. M. 122 Tue 2:30 PM

Tridon, F. 67 Mon 2:30 PM

Tridon, F. 23A.4 Thu 4:45 PM

Tripp, A. W. 32 Mon 2:30 PM

Troemel, S. 5 Mon 2:30 PM

Tsai, C. L. 152 Tue 2:30 PM

Tsai, C. C. 19B.8 Wed 12:15 PM

Tsai, P. S. 135 Tue 2:30 PM

Tyynela, J. 14A.3 Tue 4:30 PM

U

Unal, C. 23A.3 Thu 4:30 PM

Unal, C. 90 Tue 2:30 PM

Ushio, T. 12A.6 Tue 11:45 AM

V

Vagasky, C. 217 Thu 9:30 AM

Valdivia, J. M. 22 Mon 2:30 PM

Valdivia, J. M. 21A.2 Thu 11:15 AM

van den Heuvel, F. E. M. 80 Tue 2:30 PM

van Lier-Walqui, M. 7A.3 Mon 4:30 PM

Varadarajan, R. 134 Tue 2:30 PM

Varble, A. C. 257 Thu 9:30 AM

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

M T Vendrasco, E. P. 78 Mon 2:30 PM

Vidal, L. 154 Tue 2:30 PM

Vilardell Sanchez, J. 210 Thu 9:30 AM

Vivekanandan, J. 21A.3 Thu 11:30 AM

Vogel, J. M. 22A.2 Thu 1:45 PM

Vollbracht, D. 204 Thu 9:30 AM

Vollbracht, D. 205 Thu 9:30 AM

von Lerber, A. 86 Tue 2:30 PM

Vulpiani, G. 21C.4 Thu 11:45 AM

W

Wade, R. 288 Thu 9:30 AM

Wallace, R. 25 Mon 2:30 PM

Wang, H. 23B.2 Thu 4:15 PM

Wang, S. 35 Mon 2:30 PM

Wang, X. 201 Thu 9:30 AM

Wang, Y. 5B.5 Mon 11:30 AM

Wang, Y. 265 Thu 9:30 AM

Warde, D. A. 198 Thu 9:30 AM

Warren, R. A. 232 Thu 9:30 AM

Warren, R. A. KS16.1 Wed 8:00 AM

Warren, R. A. 181 Tue 2:30 PM

Weber, M. E. KS8.1 Tue 8:00 AM

Weckwerth, T. M. 166 Tue 2:30 PM

Wheatley, D. M. 73 Mon 2:30 PM

Wienhoff, Z. B. 147 Tue 2:30 PM

Williams, C. R. 7B.3 Mon 4:30 PM

Williams, C. R. 79 Tue 2:30 PM

Williams, E. 108 Tue 2:30 PM

Williams, E. R. 287 Thu 9:30 AM

Willie, D. 261 Thu 9:30 AM

Wilson, J. W. 21B.2 Thu 11:15 AM

Wingo, S. M. 112 Tue 2:30 PM

Witt, A. 224 Thu 9:30 AM

Wolde, M. 42 Mon 2:30 PM

Wolff, D. B. Sr. 104 Tue 2:30 PM

Wood, V. T. 49 Mon 2:30 PM

Wunsch, M. 227 Thu 9:30 AM

Wurman, J. 283 Thu 9:30 AM

X

Xiao, H. 11 Mon 2:30 PM

Xiao, H. 22A.7 Thu 3:00 PM

Xin, L. 6B.2 Mon 1:45 PM

Xu, Q. 54 Mon 2:30 PM

Y

Yang, J. 28 Mon 2:30 PM

Yin, J. 203 Thu 9:30 AM

Yin, J. 24B.6 Fri 9:45 AM

Yokota, S. 44 Mon 2:30 PM

Yoshikawa, E. 20A.1 Thu 8:00 AM

Young, J. M. C. 280 Thu 9:30 AM

Yu, L. 62 Mon 2:30 PM

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Presenter Index

Paper # Day Time Paper # Day Time

M T

Z

Zeng, Q. 274 Thu 9:30 AM

Zhang, A. 242 Thu 9:30 AM

Zhang, J. 5B.1 Mon 10:30 AM

Zhang, J. 22B.3 Thu 2:00 PM

Zhang, P. 246 Thu 9:30 AM

Zhao, K. 17 Mon 2:30 PM

Zheng, Y. 161 Tue 2:30 PM

Ziegler, C. L. 21B.4 Thu 11:45 AM

Zrnic, D. S. 12A.1 Tue 10:30 AM

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EXHIBITING ORGANIZATIONS

Exhibitor Guide

~~~~~~~~~~38th Conference on Radar Meteorology

~~~~~~~~~~

Swissotel Chicago Chicago, IL

28 August-1 September 2017

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EXHIBITING ORGANIZATIONS

BARON4930 Research Dr.

Huntsville, AL 35805Contact: Mr. Bob Baron , Jr.

[email protected]

Booth No: 202 A world-leading developer of advanced meteorological technologies, Baron provides radar and system integration solutions to organizations with a critical need for precision weather detection. Baron Gen3 radars enable accurate hydrometeorological analysis, featuring continuous automated calibration and ground-breaking CLEAN-AP clutter suppression via exclusive license with the University of Oklahoma. Systems are available in fi xed-base, mobile and transportable confi gurations, with custom implementations in S-band, High-Frequency S-band, C-band and X-band frequencies. Dual-polarization is available as a standard option. The company has leveraged MESO-SAILS scanning strategies from the National Weather Service to deliver more frequent updates of Baron-exclusive weather data products like automated storm tracks, hail tracking and wind shear detection. Additionally, the Baron Lynx weather analysis and display system allows meteorologists to precisely identify, evaluate and track meteorological targets. Organizations can easily share weather content from Lynx with the general public, providing a direct conduit to an organization’s stakeholders, staff and constituents.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Enterprise Electronics Corporation (EEC)Arlington, VA

Contact: Mr. Kurt Kleess334-347-3478

[email protected]

Booth No: 303We’ve been defi ning the industry since 1971 – and we’re not done yet! EEC is your complete remote sensing provider, offering weather radar and satellite data collection & display solutions. With over 45-years of trusted service, and thousands of customers around the world, EEC is the recognized leader in the supply of advanced remote sensing systems. EEC is also proud to introduce our new, Endurance weather radar systems. Our Endurance radar systems come standard with a fully solid-state transmitter. No more magnetrons or klystrons. Utilizing our advanced pulse-compression technologies, Endurance provides all the effective range of a traditional tube-based radar at a fraction of the power. Endurance; the solid-state of things to come! Be sure to stop by booth #303 to learn more about some of our brand-new Endurance solid-state weather radars, our compact Ranger X-Band solid-state radars, our expansive TeleSpace weather satellite systems, and our traditional Defender weather radar solutions. www.eecweathertech.comwww.facebook.com/EECRadarhttps://twitter.com/eecweathertech

~~~~~~~~~~~~

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EXHIBITING ORGANIZATIONS

EWR Weather Radar Systems, Inc.336 Leffi ngwell AvenueKirkwood, MO 63122

Contact: Richard Chappuis314 821 1022

[email protected]

Booth No: 201EWR Radar Systems Inc., is the Industry’s Premier Innovator of fully Solid State X-Band ground based weather radar systems. EWR’s E700XD is the #1 supplied Portable Doppler Radar to the US Department of Defense. EWR’s revolutionary E750 Dual Polarization Radar is available in X or C-Band. EWR offers a versatile line of Commercial-Off-The-Shelf products and the capability and experience to deliver solutions based on an end-user’s required performance characteristics and technical specifi cations. EWR’s lifecycle support programs produce the highest levels of operational availability and customer satisfaction. Please stop by EWR’s booth #201 during the 2017 AMS Radar Meeting to discuss your application.

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Furuno GPS/GNSS4400 NW Pacifi c Rim Blvd

Camas, WA 98607Booth No: 200

~~~~~~~~~~~~

Selex ES GmbHRAIFFEISEN STR. 10

41470 Neuss GermanyContact: Ms. Petra Bartasonok

+49 (0) 2137 782 [email protected]

http://selex-es.deBooth No: 100 Worldwide, Selex ES GmbH, a subsidiary of Leonardo, occupies a leading position in the design, manufacture, sales and service of weather radar systems, sensors and system solutions for meteorology, hydrology and aviation. With its METEOR product line, featuring state-of-the-art S-, C- and X-Band weather radar technology, Selex ES GmbH spearheads the weather radar industry, serving a wide base of international customers including aviation authorities, national weather services, military services, hydrological institutions and research agencies. The company focuses on providing customized system and turnkey solutions that refl ect a deep concern for the individual customer. More than 50 years of experience, reliability and a professional approach to challenges have contributed to the company’s excellent reputation among experts in the meteorological fi eld

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Vaisala194 South Taylor AveLouisville, CO 80027

Booth No: 102

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EXHIBITING ORGANIZATIONS

~~~~~~~~~~~Booth LocatorBaron ___________________________________________________ 202Enterprise Electroncis Corp (EEC) _______________________________ 303EWR Weather Radar Systems Inc.________________________________ 201Furuno GPS/GNSS __________________________________________ 200 Selex ES GmbH ____________________________________________ 100Vaisala ___________________________________________________ 102

Exhibit Hours:Mon., 28 Aug 5:30–7:30 P.M. (Opening Reception/Cash Bar)Tues,., 29 Aug. 8:30 A.M..–5:30 P.M.Wed., 30 Aug 9:00 A.M.–12:00 NOON All coffee breaks during the above times will be held in the Exhibit Hall.

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This year’s theme isTransforming Communication in the Weather, Water, and Climate EnterpriseDon’t miss 30+ conferences and symposia, networking opportunities, short courses, and hundreds of exhibitors. Early registration deadline is 1 December.

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swissotelchicagomeetings.com | 312.268.8215323 East Wacker Drive, Chicago, IL 60601-9722

REGISTRATION

EVENT CENTRE

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Monte Rosa: AMS Registration Desk

Vevey: Keynotes, Sessions, and Short Courses

St. Gallen: Sessions2nd Floor Prefunction: Mon/Fri AM Coffee Break, Tribute Session Reception, Young Scientist Networking Meeting

Zurich DEFG: Posters

Zurich ABC: Exhibits