The Use of CloudSat Data to Characterize The Microphysical Structure of Extreme Precipitation Events over South and Southeast of Brazil Uso dos Dados do Satélite CloudSat para Caracterização da Estrutura Microfísica de Eventos de Precipitação Extrema Sobre as Regiões Sul e Sudeste do Brasil

The goal of this work is to investigate the microphysical structure of clouds formed in extreme precipitation events in south and southeast of Brazil. Seven cases were studied with data from CloudSat satellite, through its 94-GHZ profiling radar, complemented by precipitation estimates from Aqua satellite. The analyzed parameters were: effective radius, water content and particle concentration, all for liquid water and ice, creating a set of six variables. In general aspects, the results revealed events containing mainly Nimbostratus (Ns), with high values of liquid parameters, and events with Cumulonimbus (Cb) predominance, where the presence of ice plays a more important role in correlating with precipitation extremes. The profiles at the location of most intense precipitation were individually analyzed for each case, which leads to a clear distinction between two groups, one with the highest precipitation-rate cases (Group A) and the other gathering the lowest-rate cases (Group B). Group A presented notably lower values of liquid water parameters in the lower portion of the cloud. For example, at an altitude of 2 km, effective radius was around 5 μm, compared to 10 μm for Group B. As for ice parameters analysis, Group A presented relatively higher values in the upper portion of the cloud. Ice water content reached peaks between 1 and 1.5 gm-3, while only one case in Group B exceeded 0.5 gm-3. Cloud tops in Group A went up to around 14 km and between 10 and 11 km in Group B. The results found are validated by observations obtained from previous methodologies, which allowed only for local measurements. CloudSat fills the gaps and unveils the entire picture. It will be necessary to expand the number of case studies in order to find actual microphysical signature of extreme events, and this paper contributes as a starting point for future works and even operational tools.


Introduction
The main motivations for studying meteorology are the tragic consequences that some weather phenomena can cause, with strong winds and heavy precipitation being the most mentioned associated hazards. These are called extreme events, and the common factor to almost all of them is the presence of clouds. Therefore, it is to expect that a good understanding of what happens in the interior of these clouds should provide valuable information that later can help prevent such consequences.
The next stage of scientiic evolution in cloud research came with remote sensing techniques, detailed by Liou (2002). Besides the visualization of large-scale cloud systems and their geographical position, satellites allowed the retrieval of smallscale parameters through advanced multispectral algorithms, making microphysical properties part of satellite products. The following authors provide greater detail on that subject: Szczodrak et al. (2001), Kawamoto et al. (2001),   . Rosenfeld et al. (2008) studied microphysical characteristics associated with severe weather, developing a conceptual model that deined a microphysical signature for convective clouds that precede tornadoes or large hail storms. The work used numerical simulations and satellite data to describe how the cloud top evolves during its vertical growth, analyzing particle efective radius, thermodynamic phase, and corresponding air temperature. It shows that large hail is favored when small particles are found at lower levels because it inhibits rain formation when the cloud is in the warm stage. Hence, most of the condensate can reach supercooled levels without having formed precipitation embryos. As updrafts get more intense, hail can grow larger inside the cloud, and tornadoes occur in supercells with extreme cases of intense updrafts (Rasmussen & Blanchard, 1998;Hamill & Church, 2000).
Before the satellites, ground radars were already used for monitoring mesoscale cloud systems (Battan & Theiss, 1972;Rogers & Yau, 1989) and they also went through an important evolution, making it possible for them to be applied to microphysical studies. As radars of millimeter wavelengths were developed, as opposed to the conventional centimeter typically operated, nonprecipitating clouds could be "seen" by the sensors (Liou, 2002). In this context, NASA combined the two most common remote sensing techniques and in 2006 launched the CloudSat satellite, carrying a 94-GHz radar called Cloud Proiling Radar (CPR) (Stephens et al., 2002). The main purpose of the project is to provide information on radiation of each vertical level, a gap left by other satellites. Since the launch, CloudSat has been used by researchers in climate or mesoscale areas (Haynes & Stephens, 2007;Luo et al., 2008;Luo et al., 2009;Huang et al., 2012;Zhang et al., 2014). Setvak et al. (2013) present one of the rare documented studies using CloudSat in Brazil and other parts of Latin America. They show a combined analysis of A-Train satellites for selected storm events, one being in western Brazil (22 December 2007) and another in Argentina/Uruguai (23 December 2009). Only the basic data were shown, not resorting to the available retrieved parameters. This paper uses data from CloudSat satellite to characterize microphysical properties of extreme events over the south and southeast of Brazil. Aqua satellite is also used to complement the analysis with estimates of precipitation. CloudSat lies the irst space-based millimeter-wavelength cloud radar, hence providing plenty and new data on large cloud systems. Therefore, a secondary goal is to evaluate how appropriate this new tool is for the proposed work.

Methods and Data 2.1 The CloudSat Mission and the A-Train
CloudSat is inserted in a project that involves ive other polar-orbiting satellites lying in formation just a few minutes apart. This is called the A-Train Constellation (Stephens, 2002), where A stands for afternoon, indicating the period of the day that the composition crosses the Equator. All members of the A-Train Constellation are environmental satellites that complement each other, with the purpose to build a monitoring system of the earth's climate components and understand them in greater depth, due to growing climate change concerns. The system's synergy has been applied to a number of studies in cloud microphysics and weather phenomena (Das et al., 2013;Setvak et al., 2013;Tourville et al., 2015).

The Cloud Proiling Radar (CPR)
The CPR, only payload instrument carried by the satellite, has a frequency of 94 GHz (W band), which was necessary to obtain the desired power without making the antenna too long. Unlike other kinds of sensors, the CPR does not scan the atmosphere horizontally, but generates a curtain, or one two-dimensional cross-section, through the atmosphere along the orbital trajectory of the satellite, with a range vertical resolution of approximately 485 m, oversampled to 240 m, and a horizontal footprint of 1.4 km . The poor horizontal coverage makes it impossible to fully depict a cloud system, and a certain degree of luck is required for the satellite to pass over the system of interest and over a relevant portion of it. More details can be found on Stephens et al. (2008).

Variables and Algorithm Description
In order to microphysically characterize the selected cloud systems of this study, three quantities are used: efective radius, particle concentration and water content, all for liquid water and ice, resulting in six variables. Vertical proiles of these variables are presented for the whole satellite passage extent over the cloud system, creating a vertical crosssection image of it. All of the above estimates are contained in the Radar-Visible Optical Depth Cloud Water Content Product (2B-CWC-RVOD).
CloudSat has Radar limitations when it comes to heavy precipitation detection (Tourville et al., 2015). Therefore, the distributions of the microphysical quantities are confronted with precipitation rates provided by the AMSR-E (Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer-Earth Observing System) instrument (Kummerow & Ferraro, 2014), on board of Aqua satellite, which is a member of the A-Train.
Since Aqua scans the atmosphere horizontally, the closest pixels to the CloudSat trajectory are used by the algorithm, therefore it becomes a CloudSat product, and the resolution is also adjusted to match the native products. In order to reine the analysis process, individual soundings for each variable at the coordinates where precipitation rates are highest are shown.
It is important to highlight here one aspect of the product algorithm that will afect the visualization of the variables and their interpretation. The CloudSat Process Description Document for the product used in this work (CloudSat Data Processing Document, 2008) explains that at temperatures above 0°C all present water is considered liquid, while below temperatures of -20°C all water is considered to be ice. In the 0 to -20°C interval the two proiles are combined through a simple (linear) interpolation based on temperature, such that liquid content gradually disappears at -20°C and ice gradually disappears at 0°C. For this reason, cross sections shown in the next chapter are abruptly interrupted when these limits are reached.
Since the CloudSat mission goal is to retrieve clouds microphysical parameters, the algorithm has to include some sort of ilter to prevent precipitation drops from entering the proiles. Currently, it uses a simple method that considers relectivity returns greater than -15 dBZ likely to be drizzle or rain. The proile is not discarded but is given a lag indicating that precipitation is possibly occurring. However, in practice, the presence of any signiicant precipitation often causes the retrieval to fail to converge, resulting in an error condition (CloudSat Data Processing Document, 2008). Precipitation-sized particles imply in a deviation from the previously assumed log-normal distribution for particle concentration.

Events
The seven case studies analyzed in the present work and presented below were preferentially selected from "Climanálise" bulletins, issued every month by the Center for Weather Prediction and Climate Studies/National Institute for Space Research (CPTEC/INPE) on http://climanalise. cptec.inpe.br/~rclimanl/boletim/. The south and southeast regions of Brazil were chosen due to population concentration in this part of the country, a contributing factor for extreme events to produce more damage. These documents highlight the most signiicant precipitation-related events for the particular month, among other meteorological aspects. Thus, no quantitative criteria were used to classify an extreme event. All reports of precipitation quantity mentioned in the cases below were extracted from the Climanálise bulletins. This section describes each case study with essential information on synoptic environment in which the mesoscale phenomena were embedded. The synoptic charts referred to below (not shown) were obtained from the Navy Hydrography Center -Marine Meteorological Service of Brazil.

Case 1 -20 August 2007
The weather system of the irst case was the only one located almost entirely over the ocean, drifting from the initial proposal, and hence no information available from Climanálise. However, since it was a well-conigured extratropical cyclone, it was thought to be a good opportunity to characterize this sort of phenomenon with CloudSat. The satellite passed over the cyclone at 0425UTC and the synoptic chart from 1200UTC depicts a 1000 hPa low-pressure system with the associated cold, warm and occluded fronts. Figure 1a shows the GOES infrared image from 0415UTC and the poleward trajectory of CloudSat.

Case 2 -09 November 2007
A low-pressure region evolving into a frontal system was the synoptic environment when CloudSat passed over south of Brazil at 0505UTC. The synoptic charts from 0000UTC and 1200UTC show the deepening process, and a cold front is identiied at 1200UTC. The infrared image from 0515UTC ( Figure 1b) shows a not yet organized area of instability with deep convection clouds and cirrus on the CPR path.
This system caused a precipitation amount of 75.2 mm throughout the day in the city of Ivaí, PR; 86.6 mm in Londrina, PR; and 100 mm in Campo Mourão, PR. Additionally, a station in the city of Passo Fundo, RS, recorded gusts of up to 120 km/h and power outage.

Case 3 -13 March 2008
At 0430UTC, CloudSat intercepted an area of instability over the state of São Paulo, southeast of Brazil. The synoptic charts of 0000UTC and 1200UTC show a cold front located in the Atlantic Ocean coupling with a low-pressure system over the continent. Figure 1c identiies the position of the mesoscale system with the infrared image from 0500UTC, suggesting its development in a prefrontal environment.
Weather stations recorded amounts of 123.2 mm of precipitation in Iguapé, SP and 84 mm in Guarulhos, SP, between March 13th and March 14th, and on the following days, the synoptic picture evolved into a South Atlantic Convergence Zone (SACZ).

Case 4 -09 June 2008
The edge of an extratropical cyclone hit the state of Rio Grande do Sul, the southernmost state of Brazil, causing damage to the capital, Porto Alegre, RS. Unrooing and falling trees were some of the consequences that strong winds brought to the city, as reported by the Climanálise bulletin. The recorded value at the airport weather station was 72 km/h at 2347UTC and the 10 June 0000UTC synoptic chart identiies the system close to the shore. The CloudSat passage (at 1730UTC) was not exactly over Porto Alegre, but near enough to capture some of the mesoscale activities associated with the system. Figure 1d shows the equatorward trajectory of CloudSat with the infrared image on the background.

Case 5 -03 January 2009
A frontogenesis associated with a lowpressure system inluenced the weather of south and southeast of Brazil on this day. CloudSat passed over the state of Rio Grande do Sul at 1735UTC and encountered formations, as can be seen on Figure  1e that shows the infrared image from 1745UTC and the CloudSat trajectory overlapped. The image also shows that the clouds of such formations appear with little brightness, indicating relatively warm tops and moderate vertical development, that is, no thunderstorms. CloudSat provides a cloud  (Wang et al., 2011), which, coherently, identiies most of the clouds of this system as nimbostratus. The city of Torres, RS, approximately 300 km from the CloudSat trajectory, recorded an amount of 108 mm of precipitation between January 3rd and January 4th, and observation from the Porto Alegre airport weather station shows continuous light to moderate rain from 2200UTC of January 2nd to 0800UTC of January 4th. Such persistence explains the amount recorded since there were no signiicant vertical development clouds.

Case 6 -21 January 2010
The event described in this case happened in the state of São Paulo at the same location as the one from case 3. The synoptic analysis is also similar, as a cold front was approaching the southeast of Brazil and mesoscale instabilities were being triggered in the pre-frontal environment. The CloudSat passage was at 0445UTC and the synoptic charts from 0000UTC and 1200UTC, as well as the infrared image of 0430UTC (Figure 1f) illustrate the conditions. The Climanálise bulletin for this period only informs that amounts greater than 100 mm were recorded in weather stations of São Paulo, SP but does not give further details about damages or exact quantities.

Case 7 -06 April 2010
In this case, a cold front over the state of Espírito Santo still inluenced the weather in the city of Rio de Janeiro, where the system had passed a couple of days before. The amount of precipitation between April 5th and April 6th exceeded 300 mm, one of the greatest historical records of the city. After 36 hours of continuous moderate to heavy rain, the result was the occurrence of many mudslides that caused over 250 fatalities and 10,800 left homeless. Besides, generalized loods afected the daily life of all citizens.
CloudSat lew over Rio de Janeiro at 0424UTC and the amount of precipitation at one of the city's rainfall stations from 0335UTC and 0435UTC was 21.6 mm. The infrared image shown in Figure 1g reveals that the most vertically developed clouds had, in fact, moved northeast and the predominant formations over Rio de Janeiro were lower-topped clouds, conirmed by the absence of thunderstorm observations from the airport station throughout the entire precipitation period. However, the CloudSat product classiied most of the system as deep convection, suggesting a possible mix of nimbostratus and towering cumulus.

Vertical Cross Sections and General Aspects
This section presents the CloudSat vertical cross sections of each microphysical quantity for case 2 (Figure 2), along with precipitation rates estimated by the AMSR-E product. A discussion of general aspects applied to all cases then follows. It is important to remember the mixed phase limitation mentioned in section 2.3, which produces the abrupt interruptions of data and can afect the reliability of the 0°C to -20°C range.
The AMSR-E methodology was unable to detect precipitation rates for case 5, in spite of continuous records in nearby surface stations. Synoptic conditions favored the occurrence of rain in extensive areas, therefore such inability can be explained by the fact that AMSR-E precipitation detection is based on brightness temperature (Kummerow & Ferraro, 2014), a method best suited for convective rain, which was not the case for this event.
According to the CloudSat classiication product (not shown), cases 4 and 5 were the only ones with nimbostratus predominance, while case 3 exhibits a clear division between nimbostratus and deep convection clouds. All other cases presented deep convection predominance. The highest rates of precipitation in the studied cases are associated with deep convection, which corroborates with the AMSR-E methodology not being able to detect precipitation from nimbostratus or stratiform clouds.
Since there were three cases (3, 4 and 5) with nimbostratus predominance, it was possible to gather some microphysical characteristics of these formations when linked to extreme events. All cross sections of parameters for liquid water displayed relative maxima well marked below the -20°C isotherm. In those regions, particle concentration was in the 90-100 cm -3 range in cases 4 and 5, and a little lower in case 3 (80-90 cm -3 range). As for ISSN 0101-9759 e-ISSN 1982-3908 -Vol. 41 -1 / 2018 p. 15-27

The Use of CloudSat Data to Characterize The Microphysical Structure of Extreme Precipitation Events over South and Southeast of Brazil
liquid water content (LWC), the referred maxima varied from 0.5 gm -3 in case 3, 1.2 gm -3 in case 4 and 1.6 gm -3 in case 5. Particle concentration and LWC presented their maximum along the 0°C isotherm, while particle efective radius maximum location tended to follow cloud top height. Where cloud tops are relatively low, such maxima appear between 0 and -10°C, and for higher cloud tops, between -10 and -20°C. This is probably due to more active updrafts inside the cloud. In case 3, efective radius maximum reached 18 µm, while in cases 4 and 5 they were found in the 20-22 µm interval. Ice parameters showed low values with little variation for the nimbostratus cases, especially particle concentration and ice content.
It is interesting to note that the cloud classiication product does not take into account microphysical properties of the cloud. Hence, the pattern found for the cases studied here could complement future classiication methods. The current CloudSat product considers parameters like cloud base and top heights, optical thickness, the presence of ice and surface precipitation. The method also uses the aid of the Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) on board of CALIPSO satellite, member of the A-Train constellation which passes 15 seconds after CloudSat.
A general aspect of deep convection cases to be highlighted here is that maximum cores for

The Use of CloudSat Data to Characterize The Microphysical Structure of Extreme Precipitation Events over South and Southeast of Brazil
each ice parameter tended to be positioned into a speciic portion of the cloud. Efective radii showed higher values on the lowest part of the graph (right above 0°C isotherm), ranging from 130 to 160 µm, while ice concentration maxima were located near cloud tops, with values ranging from 370 to 600 L -1 , approximately. Ice water content (IWC) cores settled in the central portion, between -20 and -50°C and its cores' values ranged from 0.8 to 2 gm -3 .
Turning the analysis more speciically to extreme events, now we consider how microphysical parameters behave at the positions where the highest precipitation rates are found. The irst thing to notice is the importance of signiicant presence of ice particles to establish the preferential position of highest rates since in all cases the position of the main precipitation peak coincided with relative or absolute maxima of ice parameters. Another favorable structure that seems to be correlated with high precipitation rates is the concomitant presence of liquid water and ice maximum cores. In case 2, for instance, the highest values of droplet efective radius are on the same vertical axis of the maximum cores of ice efective radius (Figure 2). Although less signiicant, a relative maximum of droplet concentration and LWC are also observed in the same axis. Other cases follow this tendency and it is also noticeable that regions of high ice parameters values that do not meet a maximum of liquid water values lead to little or non-observed detected precipitation.
CloudSat results for LWC values at high precipitation rate locations seemed to be lower than expected, with maximum found between 1.5 and 1.6 gm -3 , associated with nimbostratus clouds. According to Heymsield & Musil (1982), cumuliform deep convection clouds can reach LWC values twice as high, but our results for this cloud type showed maxima of fewer than 1 gm -3 . Such discrepancy still requires research to be explained, but could be related to the cloud development stage or the presence of precipitation-induced downdrafts

Individual Vertical Proiles
In order to deepen the analysis of clouds that trigger extreme conditions of precipitation, a local approach is now considered by taking the individual vertical proile of the highest precipitation peak for each case. The results are shown in Figure 3 for liquid water parameters and in Figure 4 for ice parameters. Naturally, since the CloudSat product did not detect any precipitation for case 5, it is not included in this analysis, making it a total of six cases.  Table 1, one can notice that such separation coincides with the cases with highest and lowest precipitation rates. The irst group, hereafter called Group A, consists of the highest values (10, 14 and 18 mm/h) and highest cloud tops, while the other, hereafter called Group B, gathers the cases with lowest rates (4, 4 and 7 mm/h) and lowest cloud tops. Using this distinction, the microphysical characteristics of each group can be assessed separately.  Table 1 Approximate values of the highest precipitation rates detected in each studied case.

The proiles of Group A show lower values
of liquid water parameters compared to Group B, suggesting the inluence of updrafts to decrease the amount of liquid particles at levels near cloud base (concentration and mass), as well as the size of the existing ones. The proile of case 2, event for which the highest precipitation rate was detected, displays a pronounced minimum in all three parameters of liquid water at around 2 km of height. High values of ice parameters at upper levels conirm the importance of microphysical processes of ice in generating heavy precipitation.
Groups A and B show the same pattern for droplet efective radius (Figure 3a), with Group A dislocated about 5 µm to the lower values. The particles increase in size with height and tend to stabilize in the last kilometers. The ice efective radius of both groups appear mixed at lower levels ( Figure 4a), however, Group B presents a sharp decline after 6 km of height, while Group A decreases more smoothly and reaches higher altitudes. Droplet concentration of Group B starts the proile at 70 cm -3 at cloud base and increases with height until it reaches a critical point (3 km for cases 1 and 4; 4.5 km for case 7) where values decrease rapidly. Group A starts the proile at around 50 cm -3 (except case 2, which started at 60 cm -3 due to the minimum at 2 km) until mixing with Group B proiles at between Before inishing the results discussion, two cases deserve a little more attention. First, case 1 and the fact that it occurred over the ocean. The theory states that low availability of condensation nuclei over maritime surfaces leads to larger droplets, and the comparison among the proiles of droplet efective radius in Figure 3a shows that case 1 has the highest values. In order to correctly assess this aspect of the result, the comparison should be made with clouds of the same LWC; however, this indicates the good reliability of CloudSat data.
The other highlight is case 7, which also presented unique characteristics. The vertical cross sections show lower and more irregular cloud tops, compared to the other six cases. Protuberances can be observed, and these may be related to more intense local updrafts, which would reairm the deep convection classiication given by the CloudSat product (not shown), despite the relatively low cloud tops. However, characteristics of stratiform clouds, like nimbostratus, are also present: high values of liquid water parameters at low levels and low precipitation rate detected by AMSR-E and surface stations (coherent with the typical moderate and continuous precipitation from nimbostratus).

The Attenuation Problem
It was said in chapter 2 that the presence of precipitation would cause problems for the retrieval of cloud properties, due to the high sensitivity of the radar to precipitation-sized particles, a characteristic inherent to the frequency of 94GHz used by the CPR.
Such problems, in the form of attenuation of the signal, may explain one of the main features seen in the proiles, as the example of Figure 5 suggests. It shows the relectivity signals for case 1, where a clear attenuation can be seen near the surface of the regions that coincide with higher precipitation peaks from the AMSR-E product. The dashed line marks the 10 dbZ threshold, which is part of the ilter applied by Justo & França (2016) to detect compromised signals due to precipitation from deep convection or Nimbostratus clouds, and the individual proile from case 1 used in Figures 3 and 4 fall under the iltered area. Therefore, attenuation by precipitating particles is thought to be a signiicant contributing factor to account for the low level reduction of liquid water parameters of cases with highest AMSR-E precipitation rates.

Conclusions
The present paper uses CloudSat satellite data to investigate microphysical characteristics of clouds associated with extreme precipitation events. Along with its trajectory, CloudSat provides continuous vertical proiles of many microphysical parameters and it is the state-of-the-art remote sensing tool for wide range cloud studies. Two speciic objectives have been proposed in this study, and this section discusses how much was achieved for each one.
(a) Microphysical characteristics. The irst one refers to the physical and microphysical characteristics of extreme precipitation events occurring in the south and southeast regions of Brazil. Through the 7 studied cases, CloudSat data managed to detect speciic features for two distinct types of precipitation events: moderate continuous rain (nimbostratus) and deep convection (cumulonimbus).
Systems with nimbostratus predominance have high values of all liquid water parameters: particle efective radius, particle concentration, and LWC. Concentration and LWC core regions were found near the 0°C isotherm, while efective radius maxima could be found above, following spatial variation of the cloud tops. Precipitation rates from For deep convection events, the ice parameters played a more important role. Strong updrafts inherent to these formations prevent liquid water from accumulating at lower levels, but one could possibly ind high values of efective radius, concentration, and LWC at heights above the -20°C isotherm, which is the CloudSat upper limit for these parameters. The ice parameters structure for cumulonimbus shows core regions of efective radius near the 0°C isotherm, while ice concentration maxima are found near cloud top, with IWC nuclei in between.
Vertical proiles at the location of the highest precipitation rate were also prepared for each parameter. With the proiles displayed together, it became possible to distinguish two groups of cases, one with the highest precipitation rates (Group A) e one with the lowest rates (Group B). Compared to Group B, Group A showed the following tendencies: higher cloud tops; lower values of liquid water parameters at lower levels; higher values of ice parameters at mid and higher levels of the cloud. The next steps suggested for this particular objective include: vertical proiles for diferent regions of the system other than the highest precipitation rate location, with temperature or pressure as vertical coordinate; use of vertical velocity estimates in order to infer the cloud development stage (other methods, such as numerical modeling); comparing CloudSat data with MODIS data, taking advantage of the A-Train constellation. In addition, the spatial and temporal variability of cloud systems that generate intense precipitation are very large, especially deep convection, such that the few cases analyzed here cannot be said to be representative of an average microphysical structure, both qualitatively and quantitatively. However, this does not make the results obtained here any less valuable, for it is the irst attempt to depict microphysical properties of extreme events in south and southeast of Brazil. Therefore, more cases need to be studied in order to expand the data base and ind actual microphysical signatures of these systems in these regions.
(b) CloudSat potential. The second objective aims to assess how suitable CloudSat can be for microphysical studies of mesoscale events. The results above show the innovative features of CloudSat products, as the CPR is the only satelliteboarded instrument capable of providing continuous vertical proiles along its track. The generated cross sections can help visualize regions of maxima and minimum, cloud top and base, the degree of cloud stratiication, among other general characteristics of the system's structure. Overall, the microphysical properties found in this study fell within what was expected from previous studies using other means of observation, giving consistency and reliability to CloudSat data. Such previous methods are only capable of measuring parameters locally or with poor resolution. The CloudSat method comes to ill the gaps, allowing for the entire picture to be seen, reducing interpolations and parameters estimates.
Regarding the limitations, it is important to highlight the algorithm's poor treatment for the interval between 0°C and -20°C. If a speciic study needs accurate information on water phase in this temperature range, CloudSat may not be enough for taking satisfying conclusions. However, for an overview assessment of a cloud system, it contributes a lot for microphysical structure knowledge, because the assumed condition is usually true.
Lastly, this sudden increase in cloud data brought by CloudSat, followed by the results of this study, certainly contributes for the future development of operational microphysical products to be used daily in meteorological oices. Such implementation would improve the quality of shortand mid-term forecasts, mitigating the efects of extreme precipitation events.