Chapter 22
Weather Radar and Met Satellites

DGCA CPL/ATPL Study Notes — Aviation Meteorology

Source: IC Joshi — Aviation Meteorology (Latest Edition)

Compiled by Capt. Pankaj Pahil

Table of Contents

1. Weather Radar — Introduction

Weather Radar (Radio Detection and Ranging): An important tool for detection of rain-bearing clouds, especially CU and CB, their speed, direction of movement, and vertical extent. Used for issuing timely weather warnings so that precautionary measures are initiated for parked and moored aircraft. Radars along the coast line of India detect storms and enable issuing of storm warnings.
Range: Limited by attenuation of radar waves by rain and earth curvature effect.

2. Radar Scopes

ScopeFull NameFunction
PPIPlan-Position IndicatorPresents a plan view of the echoes; provides the bearing and range of the echo
RHIRange-Height IndicatorEnables direct reading of the altitudes of CB cells

3. Radar Wavelengths and Bands

Wavelength0.75–2.5 cm2.5–4 cm4–8 cm8–15 cm15–30 cm
BandK BandX BandC BandS BandL Band
Band Uses:

4. Types of Weather Radars

TypeWavelengthPurpose
Quantitative Radar10.0 cmQuantitative measurement of rate of precipitation, total precipitation, intensity of precipitation, and snowfall measurements
Ultra Sensitive RadarDetecting convection before and after cloud development; study CAT, gravity waves, and lee waves
Doppler Weather Radar (DWR)State-of-art; Doppler Effect; wind finding, storm detection, dual capability

5. Doppler Weather Radar (DWR)

DWR is a state-of-art Radar that works on the principle of Doppler Effect and measures change of frequency of the return signal to determine if targets are moving towards or away from the radar station. It is a coherent radar; detects the pulse difference between outgoing and return pulses.
DWR is used for the following:
Additional Radar Facts:

6. Cloud Echoes and Echo Characteristics

Stratiform Cloud Echoes

Convective Cloud Echoes

7. Echoes Associated with Severe Storms

Echo TypeSignificance
Intense and Sharp EchoesUpdraughts strong; large number of precipitation particles; developing storm = sharp boundary near top; Anvils = fuzzy echoes near the top
Hooks, Appendages and ProtuberancesSevere storms with hail; echo of figure '6' = indication of a tornado
Rapidly Moving EchoesStrong winds associated with severe storms
Wind ShearShowers seen as separate columns of rain; slant vertical columns represent vertical wind shear
Dry HolesEcho-free areas embedded in very extensive and bright echo = severe storms with strong winds and heavy rain
Rapidly Developing EchoesIndicate a vigorous storm
Large Horizontal EchoesLarge size strong echo = severe storm
Converging EchoesNumber of echoes appearing to converge = severe storm
Bright BandA few hundred metres thick; indicator of WEAK storm; just below freezing level; in stratiform precipitation
Spiral BandsIndicate tropical cyclones; last for a long time
Critical Distinction — Bright Band: Bright Band = WEAK storm indicator. This is counter-intuitive! It appears at the freezing level in stratiform (not convective) precipitation. It disappears with increasing convection. A Bright Band means the storm is NOT intense.

8. Airborne Weather Radar

🔴 RED / MAGENTA: Heavy precipitation, TS, hail, strong winds, tornadoes and severe turbulence. Aircraft should ALWAYS AVOID. Rainfall: ≥12 mm
🟡 YELLOW: Moderate precipitation, very low visibility, moderate turbulence, uncomfortable ride for passengers. Aircraft should AVOID going through. Rainfall: 4–12 mm
🟢 GREEN: Light precipitation, little to no turbulence, reduced visibility. Rainfall: 1–4 mm

Rainfall Intensity Table

ColourStorm IntensityRainfall in mm
Red (Magenta)Severe (Very strong signal)≥12
YellowLess severe (Mod intensity signal)4–12
GreenModerate (Low intensity signal)1–4

9. Meteorological Satellites

flowchart LR
    S["Met Satellites"] --> P["(a) Polar Orbiting\nAlt: 650–1500 km\nCovers earth twice in 24 hr\nSame place every 12 hr\nExample: NOAA"]
    S --> G["(b) Geostationary\nAlt: ~36,000 km\nEarth's equatorial plane\nEarth synchronized\nSame spot always\n5 cover entire globe\nRound-the-clock weather\nExample: METEOSAT, INSAT"]
ParameterPolar OrbitingGeostationary
Altitude650–1500 km~36,000 km
Earth coverageComplete earth twice in 24 hrSame spot always
Same point revisitEvery 12 hrContinuous
Number for global coverageMultiple5 satellites
Weather infoPeriodicRound the clock
ExamplesNOAAMETEOSAT, INSAT
Frequency of Satellite Imagery: Interval of observations = 30 min; however due to licensing and other restrictions, these satellites provide three hourly pictures.

10. Indian Meteorological Satellites

SatelliteLaunch DatePositionKey Features
Kalpana-112 September 200274°E3 channel VHRR: VIS (0.55–0.75 μm), IR (10.5–12.5 μm), WV (5.7–7.1 μm); VIS res 2×2 km; ~48 images/day; 5 times during daytime only
INSAT-3A10 April 200393.5°E3 channel VHRR + CCD payload for VIS/Near IR/Short Wave IR; Resolution 1×1 km; 9 images/day; hydrometeorological data collection; Indian Area coverage 44.4°N to 10.3°S, 105.6E to 46.4E
INSAT-2ECloud imagery in panchromatic VIS band; 2×2 km WV map; TIR images; BV and IR 8×8 km; CCD board
METSATSatellite pictures every 3 hours commencing 0300 UTC; processed by SDUC in ~40 min; received at ~0415Z; In cyclones — hourly observations provided
INSAT-3D25 July 201382°EAdvanced weather satellite of ISRO; launched from French Guiana Space Centre; 1 km MIR and Thermal IR; 4 km SWIR; 8 km WV; storm warning system; vertical profiles of temp/humidity
INSAT-3DR08 September 201674°EOperational Met satellite; images in VIS/IR/WV; resolution 1km, 4km, 8km
INSAT-3D & INSAT-3DR (together):
METSAT: Receives and processes satellite pictures every 3 hours, commencing 0300 UTC. Processed by SDUC in about 40 min. Imagery received after 1 hr 15 min (i.e. 0300Z picture received by 0415Z). In event of cyclones: hourly observations are provided. Animation of hourly and 3-hourly satellite pictures also available on the website.
OCEANSAT-2 (ISRO): Data utilised for Tropical Cyclone genesis and NWP models.

Foreign Satellites

SatelliteCountry/OrgTypeKey Info
NOAA (K, L, M)USA / NOAAPolar (POES)Daily global coverage of clouds, storm location, temperature, heat balance; 3 ground processing systems at IMD New Delhi, RMC Chennai, RMC Guwahati
METEOSATEUMETSATGeostationaryNear 0° meridian; operated by EUMETSAT on behalf of European Met Agencies
GMSJapanGeostationaryAt 130°E
INSATIndiaGeostationaryAt 83° and 93°
GOESUSAGeostationary (GOES)2 satellites (East and West coast); provides temp data every hour; interval ~30 min
Computer-generated output from Indian Satellites: Quantitative Satellite Products: SST, Outgoing LW Radiation, Quantitative Precipitation Estimates, Cloud Motion Vectors, Water Vapour Winds, Land Surface Emissivity, Atmospheric moisture profile, Fog detection; Vertical profile of temp/humidity, Cloud top temp, Upper winds, Convective clouds and meso-scale systems.

11. Cloud Characteristics in Satellite Imagery

FeatureAppearance in Satellite Imagery
Clouds (general)White and gray; cast dark shadows on ground; thicker clouds and water clouds are brighter than ice clouds
High clouds (detectable)Detectable only by the shadow they cast
CU cloudsGreat variety, organized into small regular lines or bands
Jet stream cloudsVery long streaks; high cirrus clouds
SmokeBrown to grey; from oil fires = black
HazeFeatureless and pale gray or whitish
DustSlightly tan (like soil); can be white, red, dark brown, even black (due to mineral content)
Volcanic plumesSteam and gas = white; ash = brown
In IR Imagery:
Quick Revision Summary — Radar Quick Revision Summary — Satellites

Practice Q&A

Q1. PPI scope provides:
(a) Plan view of echoes — bearing and range   (b) Height of echoes   (c) Intensity of echoes
Correct Answer: (a) Plan view of echoes — bearing and range
The Plan-Position Indicator (PPI) presents a plan (top-down) view of echoes and provides the bearing and range of the echo.
❌ (b) Height of echoes: This is the function of the RHI (Range-Height Indicator) scope. ❌ (c) Intensity: While colour-coded intensity may be shown, the defining feature of PPI is plan view with bearing/range.
🎓 PPI = Plan (horizontal) = Position = Bearing/Range. RHI = Range-Height = Altitude of CB cells. Easy: "RHI reads Height."
Q2. RHI scope enables direct reading of:
(a) Speed of echoes   (b) Range of echoes   (c) Altitude of CB cells
Correct Answer: (c) Altitude of CB cells
The Range-Height Indicator (RHI) enables direct reading of the altitudes of CB cells — essential for aviation weather avoidance decisions.
🎓 RHI = Range-Height Indicator. Direct reading of CB cell altitude = pilots can decide if they can overfly the CB or need to deviate.
Q3. S band radar is used for:
(a) Detection of clouds   (b) Storm detection   (c) Cyclone detection and tracking (rain, precipitation, cyclones)
Correct Answer: (c) Cyclone detection and tracking
S band (8–15 cm wavelength) is used for rain, precipitation, cyclones, and depressions. It is also called the Cyclone Detection (and tracking) Radar.
❌ (a) K and X Band = cloud detection. ❌ (b) X Band = storm detection. S Band is specifically the cyclone band.
🎓 "S for Sea/Storm/Cyclone" — S band covers the longest range for weather, best for cyclone tracking. IMD's cyclone detection network uses S-band radars along the coast.
Q4. Quantitative Radar measures rate of precipitation using wavelength:
(a) 5.0 cm   (b) 10.0 cm   (c) 3.2 cm
Correct Answer: (b) 10.0 cm
Quantitative Radar (10.0 cm wavelength) is used for quantitative measurement of rate of precipitation, total precipitation, intensity, and snowfall.
🎓 Quantitative Radar = 10 cm. Remember: 10 cm is in the S-Band range (8–15 cm). Airborne weather radar = 3 cm (X-Band).
Q5. DWR detects if targets are moving towards or away by measuring:
(a) Amplitude of return signal   (b) Change of frequency of return signal   (c) Time delay of return signal
Correct Answer: (b) Change of frequency of return signal
DWR works on the principle of the Doppler Effect — measuring the change of frequency of the return signal to determine if targets (precipitation, wind, etc.) are moving towards or away from the radar station.
🎓 Doppler Effect = frequency change. Moving towards radar = higher frequency (blue shift). Moving away = lower frequency (red shift). This principle also used in airborne weather radar for wind shear detection.
Q6. Bright Band is an indicator of:
(a) Strong/severe storm   (b) CB cloud   (c) Weak storm
Correct Answer: (c) Weak storm
Bright Band is an indicator of a WEAK storm. It appears at the freezing level in stratiform precipitation (not convective). It disappears with increasing convection.
❌ (a) Strong/severe storm: This is the OPPOSITE — Bright Band = weak storm. ❌ (b) CB cloud: CB echoes have sharp edges and may extend to −40°C — no Bright Band. Bright Band = stratiform (flat, weak) precipitation.
🎓 Counter-intuitive DGCA trap! Bright Band = WEAK storm. Formed by melting snowflakes at the freezing level in stratiform rain. Disappears when convection (strong storm) develops.
Q7. A figure '6' echo is an indication of:
(a) Hailstorm   (b) Tornado   (c) Severe turbulence
Correct Answer: (b) Tornado
A radar echo of the figure '6' shape is an indication of a tornado. Hooks, Appendages and Protuberances indicate severe storms with hail.
🎓 Figure '6' = Tornado on radar. This is because the hook-echo structure (associated with tornado supercells) resembles the number 6. Classic DGCA question.
Q8. Spiral bands on radar indicate:
(a) Severe TS   (b) Tropical Cyclone   (c) Hailstorm
Correct Answer: (b) Tropical Cyclone
Spiral bands on radar indicate tropical cyclones and last for a long time.
🎓 Spiral bands = TC signature. The spiral arms of precipitation are the classic visual structure of a tropical cyclone on radar imagery.
Q9. On airborne weather radar, Red/Magenta colour indicates:
(a) Light precipitation   (b) Moderate precipitation   (c) Heavy precipitation, TS, severe turbulence — AVOID
Correct Answer: (c) Heavy precipitation, TS, severe turbulence — aircraft should ALWAYS AVOID
Red/Magenta on airborne radar = heavy precipitation, TS, hail, strong winds, tornadoes, severe turbulence. Aircraft must always avoid these areas.
🎓 Color code: Green=Go (light, 1–4mm), Yellow=Caution (moderate, 4–12mm), Red/Magenta=STOP/AVOID (severe, ≥12mm). Never penetrate Red/Magenta areas.
Q10. Geostationary satellites are placed at an altitude of approximately:
(a) 650–1500 km   (b) 36,000 km   (c) 500 km
Correct Answer: (b) 36,000 km
Geostationary satellites are placed in near circular orbit at about 36,000 km in the plane of the earth's equator. They are earth synchronized with same period of rotation as earth.
❌ (a) 650–1500 km: This is the altitude range for Polar Orbiting satellites. ❌ (c) 500 km: Too low — this would be LEO (Low Earth Orbit).
🎓 Geostationary = 36,000 km; 5 cover the globe; earth-synchronized. Polar = 650–1500 km; covers earth twice/day; same spot every 12 hr.
Q11. How many geostationary satellites are needed to cover the entire globe?
(a) 3   (b) 4   (c) 5
Correct Answer: (c) 5
Five geostationary satellites are capable of covering the entire globe. METEOSAT, INSAT, GMS, and GOES (2) together provide global geostationary coverage.
🎓 5 geostationary satellites = global coverage. NOAA provides polar (LEO) global coverage with fewer satellites but periodic, not continuous, coverage.
Q12. Kalpana-1 satellite is located at:
(a) 74°E   (b) 93.5°E   (c) 82°E
Correct Answer: (a) 74°E
Kalpana-1 was launched on 12 September 2002 and is located at 74°E. INSAT-3A is at 93.5°E. INSAT-3D is at 82°E.
🎓 Satellite positions: Kalpana-1 = 74°E; INSAT-3A = 93.5°E; INSAT-3D = 82°E; INSAT-3DR = 74°E (same as Kalpana-1). GMS (Japan) = 130°E.
Q13. In IR satellite imagery, the lowest temperatures appear:
(a) Black   (b) Dark grey   (c) White (brightest)
Correct Answer: (c) White (brightest)
In IR images, the lowest temperatures (highest, coldest cloud tops) are the whitest (brightest). The warmest areas appear dark grey or black.
🎓 IR imagery rule: COLD = WHITE = High clouds. WARM = BLACK/DARK = Surface/warm areas. Useful for identifying deep convection (appears bright white in IR).
Q14. Drizzle does not show up on radar because radar returns are proportional to:
(a) Square of droplet diameter   (b) Fourth power of droplet diameter   (c) Sixth power of droplet diameter
Correct Answer: (c) Sixth power of droplet diameter
Radar returns are proportional to the sixth power of droplet diameter. Since drizzle droplets are very small, their sixth power is tiny — making them virtually invisible to radar.
🎓 Z = D⁶ (Z is radar reflectivity, D is droplet diameter). Sixth power means a tiny change in size = massive change in reflectivity. Drizzle droplets too small = near zero radar return.
Q15. INSAT-3D was launched from:
(a) Sriharikota   (b) Baikonur   (c) French Guiana Space Centre
Correct Answer: (c) French Guiana Space Centre
INSAT-3D was launched on 25 July 2013 from French Guiana Space Centre (Ariane launch site). It is an advanced weather satellite for operational, environmental and storm warning.
🎓 INSAT-3D = French Guiana Space Centre, 25 Jul 2013, at 82°E. INSAT-3DR = launched 08 Sep 2016 at 74°E. Both are operational Met satellites.

Master Reference Tables

Radar Band Summary

BandWavelengthUse
K Band0.75–2.5 cmCloud detection
X Band2.5–4 cmStorm detection; airborne WXR (~3 cm)
C Band4–8 cm
S Band8–15 cmRain, precipitation, cyclones, depressions; Quantitative radar ~10 cm
L Band15–30 cmLong range

Radar Echo Significance

Echo TypeSignificance
Bright BandWEAK storm; freezing level; stratiform; a few hundred metres thick
Figure '6' echoTORNADO
Spiral bandsTropical Cyclone
Hook/ProtuberanceSevere storm with hail
Dry HolesSevere storm — strong winds + heavy rain
Converging echoesSevere storm
CB echo (top at −40°C)Cumulonimbus
Slant vertical columnsVertical wind shear
Separate rain columnsWind shear in TS

Indian Satellite Summary

SatelliteLaunchPositionResolution (VIS/IR/WV)
Kalpana-112 Sep 200274°E2×2 km / — / 8×8 km
INSAT-3A10 Apr 200393.5°E1×1 km (CCD)
INSAT-3D25 Jul 201382°E1 km / 4 km / 8 km
INSAT-3DR08 Sep 201674°E1 km / 4 km / 8 km

Mnemonics

MnemonicMeaning
"PPI = Plan, RHI = Height"PPI gives plan view; RHI gives altitude of CB cells
"S = Sea/Cyclone, X = Storm, K = Clouds"Radar band applications
"Bright Band = Weak"Counter-intuitive — Bright Band = weak/stratiform storm
"6 = Tornado"Figure '6' radar echo = tornado indication
"Green Go, Yellow Caution, Red/Magenta STOP"Airborne radar color action rule
"Cold = White (IR)"In IR imagery, coldest (highest) clouds appear whitest
"5 Geosats cover globe"Five geostationary satellites = global coverage
"36,000 km Geo, 650–1500 Polar"Satellite altitude quick reference
Capt. Pankaj Pahil