The raindrop size distribution (''DSD''), or granulometry of rain, is the distribution of the number of raindrops according to their diameter (D). Three processes account for the formation of drops: water vapor condensation, accumulation of small drops on large drops and collisions between sizes. According to the time spent in the cloud, the vertical movement in it and the ambient temperature, drops have a very varied history and a distribution of diameters from a few micrometers to a few millimeters.
Definition

In general, the drop size distribution is represented as a truncated
gamma function
In mathematics, the gamma function (represented by Γ, capital Greek alphabet, Greek letter gamma) is the most common extension of the factorial function to complex numbers. Derived by Daniel Bernoulli, the gamma function \Gamma(z) is defined ...
for diameter zero to the maximum possible size of rain droplets.
The number of drop with diameter
is therefore :
with
,
and
as constants.
Marshall-Palmer distribution
The most well-known study about raindrop size distribution is from Marshall and Palmer done at
McGill University
McGill University (French: Université McGill) is an English-language public research university in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Founded in 1821 by royal charter,Frost, Stanley Brice. ''McGill University, Vol. I. For the Advancement of Learning, ...
in
Montréal
Montreal is the List of towns in Quebec, largest city in the Provinces and territories of Canada, province of Quebec, the List of the largest municipalities in Canada by population, second-largest in Canada, and the List of North American cit ...
in 1948.
They used stratiform rain with
and concluded to an exponential drop size distribution. This Marshall-Palmer distribution is expressed as:
Where
*N
0 = 8000 m
−3mm
−1 ;
*
= 4.1 R
−0.21mm
−1 (equivalent to 41 R
−0.21cm
−1 in the reference
), R being the rainrate in stratiform precipitation in millimeters per hour;
*D = raindrop diameter in mm
:The units of N
0 are sometimes simplified to cm
−4 but this removes the information that this value is calculated per cubic meter of air.
As the different precipitations (
rain
Rain is a form of precipitation where water drop (liquid), droplets that have condensation, condensed from Water vapor#In Earth's atmosphere, atmospheric water vapor fall under gravity. Rain is a major component of the water cycle and is res ...
,
snow
Snow consists of individual ice crystals that grow while suspended in the atmosphere—usually within clouds—and then fall, accumulating on the ground where they undergo further changes.
It consists of frozen crystalline water througho ...
,
sleet, etc...), and the different types of clouds that produce them vary in time and space, the coefficients of the drop distribution function will vary with each situation. The Marshall-Palmer relationship is still the most quoted but it must be remembered that it is an average of many stratiform rain events in mid-latitudes.
The upper figure shows mean distributions of stratiform and convective rainfall. The linear part of the distributions can be adjusted with particular
of the Marshall-Palmer distribution. The bottom one is a series of drop diameter distributions at several convective events in Florida with different precipitation rates. We can see that the experimental curves are more complex than the average ones, but the general appearance is the same.
Many other forms of distribution functions are therefore found in the meteorological literature to more precisely adjust the particle size to particular events. Over time researchers have realized that the distribution of drops is more of a problem of probability of producing drops of different diameters depending on the type of precipitation than a deterministic relationship. So there is a continuum of families of curves for stratiform rain, and another for convective rain.
Ulbrich distribution
The Marshall and Palmer distribution uses an exponential function that does not simulate properly drops of very small diameters (the curve in the top figure). Several experiments have shown that the actual number of these droplets is less than the theoretical curve. Carlton W. Ulbrich developed a more general formula in 1983 taking into account that a drop is spherical if D <1 mm and an ellipsoid whose horizontal axis gets flattened as D gets larger. It is mechanically impossible to exceed D = 10 mm as the drop breaks at large diameters. From the general distribution, the diameter spectrum changes, μ = 0 inside the cloud, where the evaporation of small drops is negligible due to saturation conditions and μ = 2 out of the cloud, where the small drops evaporate because they are in drier air. With the same notation as before, we have for the
drizzle the distribution of Ulbrich:
:
and
Where
is the
liquid water content,
water density, and
0.2 is an average value of the diameter in drizzle. For rain, introducing
rainrate R (mm/h), the amount of rain per hour over a standard surface:
:
and
Measurement
The first measurements of this distribution were made by rather rudimentary tool by Palmer, Marshall's student, exposing a cardboard covered with flour to the rain for a short time. The mark left by each drop being proportional to its diameter, he could determine the distribution by counting the number of marks corresponding to each droplet size. This was immediately after the Second World War.
Different devices have been developed to get this distribution more accurately:
*
Disdrometer
*Modified
wind profiler
Drop size versus radar reflectivity
Knowledge of the distribution of raindrops in a cloud can be used to relate what is recorded by a weather radar to what is obtained on the ground as the amount of precipitation. We can find the relation between the reflectivity of the radar echoes and what we measure with a device like the
disdrometer.
The rainrate (R) is equal to number of particles (
), their volume (
) and their falling speed (
):
:
The radar
reflectivity
The reflectance of the surface of a material is its effectiveness in Reflection (physics), reflecting radiant energy. It is the fraction of incident electromagnetic power that is reflected at the boundary. Reflectance is a component of the respon ...
Z is:
:
where K is the
Permittivity
In electromagnetism, the absolute permittivity, often simply called permittivity and denoted by the Greek letter (epsilon), is a measure of the electric polarizability of a dielectric material. A material with high permittivity polarizes more ...
of water
Z and R having similar formulation, one can solve the equations to have a Z-R of the type:
:
Where a and b are related to the type of precipitation (rain, snow,
convective (like in thunderstorms) or
stratiform (like from nimbostratus clouds) which have different
, K, N
0 and
.
The best known of this relation is the Marshall-Palmer Z-R relationship which gives a = 200 and b = 1.6.
[{{cite web
, url=http://www.roc.noaa.gov/ops/z2r_osf5.asp
, archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080704070826/http://www.roc.noaa.gov/ops/z2r_osf5.asp
, url-status=dead
, archive-date=2008-07-04
, title=Recommended Parameter Changes to Improve WSR-88D Rainfall Estimates During Cool Season Stratiform Rain Events
, author=National Weather Service
, publisher=]NOAA
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA ) is an American scientific and regulatory agency charged with forecasting weather, monitoring oceanic and atmospheric conditions, charting the seas, conducting deep-sea exploratio ...
, accessdate=2009-03-12, author-link=National Weather Service
It is still one of the most used because it is valid for synoptic rain in mid-latitudes, a very common case. Other relationships were found for snow, rainstorm, tropical rain, etc.
References
See also
*
Cloud drop effective radius
*
Liquid water content
*
Particle-size distribution
Cloud and fog physics
Radar meteorology