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contributor authorChen, S.
contributor authorKirstetter, P. E.
contributor authorHong, Y.
contributor authorGourley, J. J.
contributor authorTian, Y. D.
contributor authorQi, Y. C.
contributor authorCao, Q.
contributor authorZhang, J.
contributor authorHoward, K.
contributor authorHu, J. J.
contributor authorXue, X. W.
date accessioned2017-06-09T17:15:35Z
date available2017-06-09T17:15:35Z
date copyright2013/12/01
date issued2013
identifier issn1525-755X
identifier otherams-81991.pdf
identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4225054
description abstractn this paper, the authors estimate the uncertainty of the rainfall products from NASA and Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's (JAXA) Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM) Precipitation Radar (PR) so that they may be used in a quantitative manner for applications like hydrologic modeling or merging with other rainfall products. The spatial error structure of TRMM PR surface rain rates and types was systematically studied by comparing them with NOAA/National Severe Storms Laboratory's (NSSL) next generation, high-resolution (1 km/5 min) National Mosaic and Multi-Sensor Quantitative Precipitation Estimation (QPE; NMQ/Q2) over the TRMM-covered continental United States (CONUS). Data pairs are first matched at the PR footprint scale (5 km/instantaneous) and then grouped into 0.25° grid cells to yield spatially distributed error maps and statistics using data from December 2009 through November 2010. Careful quality control steps (including bias correction with rain gauges and quality filtering) are applied to the ground radar measurements prior to considering them as reference data. The results show that PR captures well the spatial pattern of total rainfall amounts with a high correlation coefficient (CC; 0.91) with Q2, but this decreases to 0.56 for instantaneous rain rates. In terms of precipitation types, Q2 and PR convective echoes are spatially correlated with a CC of 0.63. Despite this correlation, PR's total annual precipitation from convection is 48.82% less than that by Q2, which points to potential issues in the PR algorithm's attenuation correction, nonuniform beam filling, and/or reflectivity-to-rainfall relation. Finally, the spatial analysis identifies regime-dependent errors, in particular in the mountainous west. It is likely that the surface reference technique is triggered over complex terrain, resulting in high-amplitude biases.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleEvaluation of Spatial Errors of Precipitation Rates and Types from TRMM Spaceborne Radar over the Southern CONUS
typeJournal Paper
journal volume14
journal issue6
journal titleJournal of Hydrometeorology
identifier doi10.1175/JHM-D-13-027.1
journal fristpage1884
journal lastpage1896
treeJournal of Hydrometeorology:;2013:;Volume( 014 ):;issue: 006
contenttypeFulltext


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