Yann Dufournet
Delft University of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yann Dufournet.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2014
Véronique Ducrocq; Isabelle Braud; Silvio Davolio; Rossella Ferretti; Cyrille Flamant; Agustin Jansa; N. Kalthoff; Evelyne Richard; Isabelle Taupier-Letage; Pierre-Alain Ayral; Sophie Belamari; Alexis Berne; Marco Borga; Brice Boudevillain; Olivier Bock; Jean-Luc Boichard; Marie-Noëlle Bouin; Olivier Bousquet; Christophe Bouvier; Jacopo Chiggiato; Domenico Cimini; U. Corsmeier; Laurent Coppola; Philippe Cocquerez; Eric Defer; Julien Delanoë; Paolo Di Girolamo; Alexis Doerenbecher; Philippe Drobinski; Yann Dufournet
The Mediterranean region is frequently affected by heavy precipitation events associated with flash floods, landslides, and mudslides that cause hundreds of millions of euros in damages per year and often, casualties. A major field campaign was devoted to heavy precipitation and flash floods from 5 September to 6 November 2012 within the framework of the 10-year international HyMeX (Hydrological cycle in the Mediterranean Experiment) dedicated to the hydrological cycle and related high-impact events. The 2- month field campaign took place over the Northwestern Mediterranean Sea and its surrounding coastal regions in France, Italy, and Spain. The observation strategy of the field experiment was devised to improve our knowledge on the following key components leading to heavy precipitation and flash flooding in the region: i) the marine atmospheric flows that transport moist and conditionally unstable air towards the coasts; ii) the Mediterranean Sea acting as a moisture and energy source; iii) the dynamics and microphysics of the convective systems producing heavy precipitation; iv) the hydrological processes during flash floods. This article provides the rationale for developing this first HyMeX field experiment and an overview of its design and execution. Highlights of some Intense Observation Periods illustrate the potential of the unique datasets collected for process understanding, model improvement and data assimilation.
Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2010
H. Leijnse; R. Uijlenhoet; C. Z. van de Beek; A. Overeem; Tobias Otto; C.M.H. Unal; Yann Dufournet; H.W.J. Russchenberg; J. Figueras i Ventura; H. Klein Baltink; I. Holleman
Abstract The Cabauw Experimental Site for Atmospheric Research (CESAR) observatory hosts a unique collection of instruments related to precipitation measurement. The data collected by these instruments are stored in a database that is freely accessible through a Web interface. The instruments present at the CESAR site include three disdrometers (two on the ground and one at 200 m above ground level), a dense network of rain gauges, three profiling radars (1.3, 3.3, and 35 GHz), and an X-band Doppler polarimetric scanning radar. In addition to these instruments, operational weather radar data from the nearby (∼25 km) De Bilt C-band Doppler radar are also available. The richness of the datasets available is illustrated for a rainfall event, where the synergy of the different instruments provides insight into precipitation at multiple spatial and temporal scales. These datasets, which are freely available to the scientific community, can contribute greatly to our understanding of precipitation-related atmosp...
Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2008
A. L. J. Spek; C.M.H. Unal; Dmitri Moisseev; H.W.J. Russchenberg; V. Chandrasekar; Yann Dufournet
Abstract In this study, a dual-polarization spectral analysis for retrieval of microphysical properties of ice hydrometeors is developed. It is shown that, by using simultaneous Doppler polarimetric observations taken at a 45° elevation angle, it is possible to discriminate between different types of ice particles. Particle size distribution parameters for maximally two dominating types of ice particles (aggregates and plates) observed above the melting layer are retrieved. Prior to the retrieval algorithm, a selection of possible types of ice particles based on environmental conditions is carried out. The retrieval procedure is based on a least squares optimization that simultaneously minimizes fit residuals in a Doppler power spectrum and spectral differential reflectivity. The proposed method is illustrated on transportable atmospheric radar (TARA) observations of stratiform rain collected on 19 September 2001 at Cabauw, Netherlands.
Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2017
Lukas Pfitzenmaier; Yann Dufournet; C.M.H. Unal; H.W.J. Russchenberg
The interaction of ice crystals with supercooled liquid droplets in mixed-phase clouds leads to an enhanced growth of ice particles. However, such processes are still not clearly understood although they are important processes for precipitation formation in midlatitudes. To better understand how ice particles grow within such clouds, changes in the microphysical parameters of a particle population falling through the cloud have to be analyzed. The Transportable Atmospheric Radar (TARA) can retrieve the full 3D Doppler velocity vector based on a unique three-beam configuration. Using the derived wind information, a new fall streak retrieval technique is proposed so that microphysical changes along those streaks can be studied. The method is based on Doppler measurements only. The shown examples measured during the Analysis of the Composition of Clouds with Extended Polarization Techniques (ACCEPT) campaign demonstrate that the retrieval is able to capture the fall streaks within different cloud systems. These fall streaks can be used to study changes in a single particle population from its generation (at cloud top) until its disintegration. In this study fall streaks are analyzed using radar moments or Doppler spectra. Synergetic measurements with other instruments during ACCEPT allow the detection of liquid layers within the clouds. The estimated microphysical information is used here to get a better understanding of the influence of supercooled liquid layers on ice crystal growth. This technique offers a new perspective for cloud microphysical studies.
Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society | 2011
Volker Wulfmeyer; Andreas Behrendt; C. Kottmeier; U. Corsmeier; Christian Barthlott; George C. Craig; Martin Hagen; Dietrich Althausen; Fumiko Aoshima; Marco Arpagaus; Hans-Stefan Bauer; Lindsay J. Bennett; Alan M. Blyth; Christine Brandau; Cédric Champollion; Susanne Crewell; Galina Dick; Paolo Di Girolamo; Manfred Dorninger; Yann Dufournet; Rafael Eigenmann; Ronny Engelmann; Cyrille Flamant; Thomas Foken; Theresa Gorgas; Matthias Grzeschik; J. Handwerker; Christian Hauck; Hartmut Höller; W. Junkermann
Proceedings of the 9th International Symposium on Tropospheric Profiling, L'Aquila, Italy, 3-7 September 2012 | 2012
C.M.H. Unal; Yann Dufournet; Tobias Otto; H.W.J. Russchenberg
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2011
Yann Dufournet; H.W.J. Russchenberg
Archive | 2008
H.W.J. Russchenberg; Lennert Spek; Dmitri Moisseev; C.M.H. Unal; Yann Dufournet; Chandrasekhar Venkatachalam
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2018
Lukas Pfitzenmaier; C.M.H. Unal; Yann Dufournet; H.W.J. Russchenberg
ERAD 2014: 8th European Conference on Radar in Meteorology and Hydrology, Garmisch-Partenkirchen, Germany, 1-5 September 2014 | 2014
Lukas Pfitzenmaier; Yann Dufournet; C.M.H. Unal; H.W.J. Russchenberg