In this paper, a model of radar backscattering from rain-generated stalks on the ocean surface in a rain field is proposed. In the model, stalks in the rain field form… Click to show full abstract
In this paper, a model of radar backscattering from rain-generated stalks on the ocean surface in a rain field is proposed. In the model, stalks in the rain field form an array and are considered as finite water cylinders standing out of an infinite water surface. The radar backscattering coefficient from these stalks is derived. Both incoherent and coherent backscattering mechanisms from the stalks are considered. The model shows that the radar backscattering intensity is a function of the average distance between stalks on the water surface, the radar wave frequency, and the incident angle of radar waves. For light/moderate rain (at low rain rates), the radar backscattering intensity increases with increasing rain rate. For heavy rain (at high rain rates), the radar backscattering intensity decreases with increasing rain rate. The maximum radar backscattering intensity occurs at a rain rate that depends on the radar wave frequency and the incident angle of radar waves. The present model is used to explain the radar signatures of a rainfall event simultaneously observed by C-band ENVISAT (European satellite) Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar (ASAR) and ground-based weather radar in the Northwest Pacific. The relationship between the radar return intensity extracted from the C-band ASAR image and the rain rate obtained from ground-based weather radar is in agreement with the model’s calculation. Also, the air–sea interface in rain fields and its effects on the attenuation of radar backscattering are experimentally studied in the laboratory.
               
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