Publication | Closed Access
The 1995 Arizona Program: Toward a Better Understanding of Winter Storm Precipitation Development in Mountainous Terrain
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1998
Year
EngineeringGeomorphologyExtreme WeatherMountainous TerrainEarth System ScienceCentral ArizonaEarth ScienceGeophysicsRegional Climate ResponseAtmospheric ScienceApplied MeteorologyClimate ChangeHydrometeorologyMeteorologyMesoscale MeteorologyArizona ProgramBetter UnderstandingGeographyWeather DisasterAmbient Upslope FlowClimatology
The 1995 Arizona Program was a field experiment aimed at advancing the understanding of winter storm development in a mountainous region of central Arizona. From 15 January through 15 March 1995, a wide variety of instrumentation was operated in and around the Verde Valley southwest of Flagstaff, Arizona. These instruments included two Doppler dual-polarization radars, an instrumented airplane, a lidar, microwave and infrared radiometers, an acoustic sounder, and other surface-based facilities. Twenty-nine scientists from eight institutions took part in the program. Of special interest was the interaction of topographically induced, storm-embedded gravity waves with ambient upslope flow. It is hypothesized that these waves serve to augment the upslope-forced precipitation that falls on the mountain ridges. A major thrust of the program was to compare the observations of these winter storms to those predicted with the Clark-NCAR 3D, nonhydrostatic numerical model.
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