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contributor authorGrassotti, Christopher
contributor authorLeidner, S. Mark
contributor authorLouis, Jean-François
contributor authorHoffman, Ross N.
date accessioned2017-06-09T14:06:59Z
date available2017-06-09T14:06:59Z
date copyright1999/06/01
date issued1999
identifier issn0894-8763
identifier otherams-12717.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4148087
description abstractThe authors report on characteristics of a rain flag derived from collocation of visible and infrared image data with rain rates over the North Atlantic Ocean obtained from microwave imagery (SSM/I) during a 3-week period (15 October 1996?2 November 1996). The rain flag has been developed as part of an effort to provide an indication of contamination by heavy rainfall in NASA scatterometer datasets. The primary results of this analysis indicate 1) that a simple albedo/infrared brightness temperature threshold is capable of flagging most of the heavy rainfall, though with a fairly high rate of false alarms, and 2) that the small difference in optimal threshold between the Tropics and midlatitudes can probably be ignored. Use of the rain flag in 12 assimilation experiments during this period showed that the number of rain-flagged wind vector cells is generally less than 1% of the number of cells. Overall, the impact from using the rain-flagged data is generally less than 5 m s?1 and localized (less than 5° of latitude and longitude). However, in some cases, the effect of excluding just one to five rain-flagged points can change the resulting analysis significantly, because their placement is critical for defining the flow along a front or some other shear-dominated environment.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleDevelopment and Application of a Visible–Infrared Rain Flag for Scatterometer Data
typeJournal Paper
journal volume38
journal issue6
journal titleJournal of Applied Meteorology
identifier doi10.1175/1520-0450(1999)038<0665:DAAOAV>2.0.CO;2
journal fristpage665
journal lastpage676
treeJournal of Applied Meteorology:;1999:;volume( 038 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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