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Dive into the research topics where Daniel P. Betten is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel P. Betten.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Convective transport of formaldehyde to the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere and associated scavenging in thunderstorms over the central United States during the 2012 DC3 study

Alan Fried; M. C. Barth; Megan M. Bela; Petter Weibring; Dirk Richter; James G. Walega; Yunyao Li; Kenneth E. Pickering; Eric C. Apel; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Alan J. Hills; Daniel D. Riemer; Nicola J. Blake; D. R. Blake; Jason R. Schroeder; Zhengzhao Johnny Luo; J. H. Crawford; J. R. Olson; S. Rutledge; Daniel P. Betten; M. I. Biggerstaff; Glenn S. Diskin; G. W. Sachse; Teresa L. Campos; F. Flocke; Andrew J. Weinheimer; C. A. Cantrell; I. B. Pollack; J. Peischl; Karl D. Froyd

We have developed semi-independent methods for determining CH2O scavenging efficiencies (SEs) during strong midlatitude convection over the western, south-central Great Plains, and southeastern regions of the United States during the 2012 Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) Study. The Weather Research and Forecasting model coupled with chemistry (WRF-Chem) was employed to simulate one DC3 case to provide an independent approach of estimating SEs and the opportunity to study CH2O retention in ice when liquid drops freeze. Measurements of CH2O in storm inflow and outflow were acquired on board the NASA DC-8 and the NSF/National Center for Atmospheric Research Gulfstream V (GV) aircraft employing cross-calibrated infrared absorption spectrometers. This study also relied heavily on the nonreactive tracers i-/n-butane and i-/n-pentane measured on both aircraft in determining lateral entrainment rates during convection as well as their ratios to ensure that inflow and outflow air masses did not have different origins. Of the five storm cases studied, the various tracer measurements showed that the inflow and outflow from four storms were coherently related. The combined average of the various approaches from these storms yield remarkably consistent CH2O scavenging efficiency percentages of: 54% ± 3% for 29 May; 54% ± 6% for 6 June; 58% ± 13% for 11 June; and 41 ± 4% for 22 June. The WRF-Chem SE result of 53% for 29 May was achieved only when assuming complete CH2O degassing from ice. Further analysis indicated that proper selection of corresponding inflow and outflow time segments is more important than the particular mixing model employed.


Monthly Weather Review | 2012

3DVAR versus Traditional Dual-Doppler Wind Retrievals of a Simulated Supercell Thunderstorm

Corey K. Potvin; Daniel P. Betten; Louis J. Wicker; Kimberly L. Elmore; Michael I. Biggerstaff

AbstractUse of the three-dimensional variational data assimilation (3DVAR) framework in dual-Doppler wind analysis (DDA) offers several advantages over traditional techniques. Perhaps the most important is that the errors that result from explicit integration of the mass continuity equation in traditional methods are avoided. In this study, observing system simulation experiments (OSSEs) are used to compare supercell thunderstorm wind retrievals from a 3DVAR DDA technique and three traditional DDA methods. The 3DVAR technique produces better wind retrievals near the top of the storm than the traditional methods in the experiments. This is largely attributed to the occurrence of severe errors aloft in the traditional retrievals whether the continuity equation integration proceeds upward (due to vertically accumulating errors), downward (due to severe boundary condition errors arising from uncertainty in the horizontal divergence field aloft), or in both directions. Smaller, but statistically significant, i...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

On the origin of pronounced O3 gradients in the thunderstorm outflow region during DC3

Heidi Huntrieser; Michael Lichtenstern; Monika Scheibe; H. Aufmhoff; Hans Schlager; Tomáš Púčik; Andreas Minikin; Bernadett Weinzierl; K. Heimerl; Daniel Fütterer; Bernhard Rappenglück; L. Ackermann; Kenneth E. Pickering; Kristin A. Cummings; M. I. Biggerstaff; Daniel P. Betten; Shawn B. Honomichl; M. C. Barth

Unique in situ measurements of CO, O3, SO2, CH4, NO, NOx, NOy, VOC, CN, and rBC were carried out with the German Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR)-Falcon aircraft in the central U.S. thunderstorms during the Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry experiment in summer 2012. Fresh and aged anvil outflow (9–12 km) from supercells, mesoscale convective systems, mesoscale convective complexes, and squall lines were probed over Oklahoma, Texas, Colorado, and Kansas. For three case studies (30 May and 8 and 12 June) a combination of trace species, radar, lightning, and satellite information, as well as model results, were used to analyze and design schematics of major trace gas transport pathways within and in the vicinity of the probed thunderstorms.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Injection of Lightning-Produced NOx, Water Vapor, Wildfire Emissions, and Stratospheric Air to the UT/LS as Observed from DC3 Measurements

Heidi Huntrieser; Michael Lichtenstern; Monika Scheibe; H. Aufmhoff; Hans Schlager; Tomáš Púčik; Andreas Minikin; Bernadett Weinzierl; K. Heimerl; I. B. Pollack; J. Peischl; T. B. Ryerson; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Shawn B. Honomichl; B. A. Ridley; M. I. Biggerstaff; Daniel P. Betten; J. W. Hair; Carolyn Butler; Michael J. Schwartz; M. C. Barth

During the Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) experiment in summer 2012, airborne measurements were performed in the anvil inflow/outflow of thunderstorms over the Central U.S. by three research aircraft. A general overview of Deutsches Zentrum fur Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR)-Falcon in situ measurements (CO, O3, SO2, CH4, NO, NOx, and black carbon) is presented. In addition, a joint flight on 29 May 2012 in a convective line of isolated supercell storms over Oklahoma is described based on Falcon, National Science Foundation/National Center for Atmospheric Research Gulfstream-V (NSF/NCAR-GV), and NASA-DC8 trace species in situ and lidar measurements.


Monthly Weather Review | 2013

Comparison between Dual-Doppler and EnKF Storm-Scale Wind Analyses: The 29–30 May 2004 Geary, Oklahoma, Supercell Thunderstorm

Corey K. Potvin; Louis J. Wicker; Michael I. Biggerstaff; Daniel P. Betten; Alan Shapiro

AbstractKinematical analyses of storm-scale mobile radar observations are critical to advancing our understanding of supercell thunderstorms. Maximizing the accuracy of these analyses, and characterizing the uncertainty in ensuing conclusions about storm structure and processes, requires knowledge of the error characteristics of different retrieval techniques under different observational scenarios. Using storm-scale mobile radar observations of a tornadic supercell, this study examines the impacts on ensemble Kalman filter (EnKF) wind analyses of the number of available radars (one versus two), uncertainty in the model-initialization sounding, the sophistication of the microphysical parameterization scheme (double versus single moment), and assimilating reflectivity observations. The relative accuracy of three-dimensional variational data assimilation (3DVAR) dual-Doppler wind retrievals and single- and dual-radar EnKF wind analyses of the supercell is also explored. The results generally reinforce the f...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

An overview of the 29 May 2012 Kingfisher supercell during DC3

E. A. DiGangi; Donald R. MacGorman; Conrad L. Ziegler; Daniel P. Betten; M. I. Biggerstaff; M. Bowlan; Corey K. Potvin

On 29–30 May 2012, the Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry experiment observed a supercell thunderstorm on the southern end of a broken line of severe storms in Oklahoma. This study focuses on an approximately 70 min period during which three mobile Doppler radars operated and a balloon-borne electric field meter, radiosonde, and particle imager flew through the storm. An overview of the relationships among flash rates, very high frequency (VHF) source densities, and Doppler-radar-derived storm parameters is presented. Furthermore, the evolution of the flash distribution relative to the midlevel storms kinematics and microphysics is examined at two times during a period of rapid storm intensification. The timing of increases in VHF counts in the 8–10 km above ground level (agl) layer, which contained the largest VHF source counts, is similar to the timing of increases in updraft mass flux, in updraft volume, and in graupel volume at approximately 5–9 km agl. Although some increases in VHF source counts had little or no corresponding increase in one or more of the other storm parameters, at least one other parameter had an increase near the time of every VHF increase, a pattern which suggests a common dependence on updraft pulses, as expected from the noninductive graupel-ice electrification mechanism. A classic bounded weak lightning region was observed initially during storm intensification, but late in the period it appeared to be due to a wake in the flow around the updraft, rather than due to a precipitation cascade around the updraft core as is usually observed.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2017

A Trajectory Mapping Technique for the Visualization and Analysis of Three-Dimensional Flow in Supercell Storms

Daniel P. Betten; Michael I. Biggerstaff; Louis J. Wicker

AbstractA visualization technique that allows simultaneous spatial analysis of complex flow behavior from thousands of Lagrangian trajectories is presented and tested using a high temporal and spatial resolution cloud model. The utility of the trajectory mapping technique is illustrated by showing that the source height of the air trajectories is a good proxy to the model-derived equivalent potential temperature. Moreover, the history of the forcing of vertical momentum is related to instantaneous vertical motion patterns shown to be elucidated in the trajectory mapping framework. The robustness of the trajectory mapping method was evaluated by integrating tendency terms and comparing Lagrangian-derived quantities to instantaneous values in the model. The original trajectory maps were also compared to those where the original fields have been filtered and/or the available data frequency are limited to the spatial and temporal scales typical of research radar datasets. The trajectory mapping method was app...


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2018

Effects of scavenging, entrainment, and aqueous chemistry on peroxides and formaldehyde in deep convective outflow over the central and Southeast U.S.: DEEP CONVECTIVE SCAVENGING, ENTRAINMENT, AND CHEMISTRY

Megan M. Bela; M. C. Barth; Owen B. Toon; Alan Fried; Conrad L. Ziegler; Kristin A. Cummings; Yunyao Li; Kenneth E. Pickering; Cameron R. Homeyer; Hugh Morrison; Qing Yang; Retha M. Mecikalski; Lawrence D. Carey; Michael I. Biggerstaff; Daniel P. Betten; A. Addison Alford

Deep convective transport of gaseous precursors to ozone (O3) and aerosols to the upper troposphere is affected by liquid phase and mixed-phase scavenging, entrainment of free tropospheric air and aqueous chemistry. The contributions of these processes are examined using aircraft measurements obtained in storm inflow and outflow during the 2012 Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) experiment combined with high-resolution (dx ≤ 3 km) WRF-Chem simulations of a severe storm, an air mass storm, and a mesoscale convective system (MCS). The simulation results for the MCS suggest that formaldehyde (CH2O) is not retained in ice when cloud water freezes, in agreement with previous studies of the severe storm. By analyzing WRF-Chem trajectories, the effects of scavenging, entrainment, and aqueous chemistry on outflow mixing ratios of CH2O, methyl hydroperoxide (CH3OOH), and hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) are quantified. Liquid phase microphysical scavenging was the dominant process reducing CH2O and H2O2 outflow mixing ratios in all three storms. Aqueous chemistry did not significantly affect outflow mixing ratios of all three species. In the severe storm and MCS, the higher than expected reductions in CH3OOH mixing ratios in the storm cores were primarily due to entrainment of low-background CH3OOH. In the air mass storm, lower CH3OOH and H2O2 scavenging efficiencies (SEs) than in the MCS were partly due to entrainment of higher background CH3OOH and H2O2. Overestimated rain and hail production in WRF-Chem reduces the confidence in ice retention fraction values determined for the peroxides and CH2O.


Advances in Meteorology | 2018

Three-Dimensional Storm Structure and Low-Level Boundaries at Different Stages of Cyclic Mesocyclone Evolution in a High-Precipitation Tornadic Supercell

Daniel P. Betten; Michael I. Biggerstaff; Conrad L. Ziegler

Nearly continuous wind retrievals every three minutes for an unprecedented 90-minute period were constructed during multiple mesocyclone cycles in a tornadic high-precipitation supercell. Asymptotic contraction rate analysis revealed the relationship between the primary and secondary rear-flank gust fronts (RFGF and SRFGFs) and the rear-flank downdraft (RFD) and occlusion downdrafts. This is thought to be the first radar-based analysis where the relationship between the near-surface gust fronts and their parent downdrafts has been explored for sequential mesocyclones. Changes in the SRFGFs were associated with surges in the RFD. During part of the mesocyclone lifecycle, the SRFGF produced a band of low-level convergence and associated deep updraft along the southwestern side of the hook echo region that ingested the RFD outflow and limited both entrainment into the RFD and reinforcement of low-level convergence along the leading edge of the primary RFGF. The second mesocyclone intensified from stretching in an occlusion updraft rather than in the primary updraft. This low-level mesocyclone remained well separated from the updraft shear region vorticity that was associated with a more traditional midlevel mesocyclone. However, the third mesocyclone initiated in the vorticity-rich region of the primary updraft zone and was amplified by stretching in the primary updraft.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2016

Ground‐level Observation of a Terrestrial Gamma Ray Flash Initiated by a Triggered Lightning

B. M. Hare; Martin A. Uman; Joseph R. Dwyer; D. M. Jordan; M. I. Biggerstaff; J. A. Caicedo; F. L. Carvalho; R. A. Wilkes; D. A. Kotovsky; W. R. Gamerota; J. T. Pilkey; T. Ngin; R. C. Moore; Hamid K. Rassoul; Steven A. Cummer; J. E. Grove; Amitabh Nag; Daniel P. Betten; A. Bozarth

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M. C. Barth

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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Conrad L. Ziegler

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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J. Peischl

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Shawn B. Honomichl

National Center for Atmospheric Research

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