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contributor authorNaud, Catherine M.
contributor authorBooth, James F.
contributor authorLebsock, Matthew
contributor authorGrecu, Mircea
date accessioned2019-09-19T10:06:45Z
date available2019-09-19T10:06:45Z
date copyright3/6/2018 12:00:00 AM
date issued2018
identifier otherjamc-d-17-0289.1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4261658
description abstractAbstractUsing cyclone-centered compositing and a database of extratropical-cyclone locations, the distribution of precipitation frequency and rate in oceanic extratropical cyclones is analyzed using satellite-derived datasets. The distribution of precipitation rates retrieved using two new datasets, the Global Precipitation Measurement radar?microwave radiometer combined product (GPM-CMB) and the Integrated Multisatellite Retrievals for GPM product (IMERG), is compared with CloudSat, and the differences are discussed. For reference, the composites of AMSR-E, GPCP, and two reanalyses are also examined. Cyclone-centered precipitation rates are found to be the largest with the IMERG and CloudSat datasets and lowest with GPM-CMB. A series of tests is conducted to determine the roles of swath width, swath location, sampling frequency, season, and epoch. In all cases, these effects are less than ~0.14 mm h?1 at 50-km resolution. Larger differences in the composites are related to retrieval biases, such as ground-clutter contamination in GPM-CMB and radar saturation in CloudSat. Overall the IMERG product reports precipitation more often, with larger precipitation rates at the center of the cyclones, in conditions of high precipitable water (PW). The CloudSat product tends to report more precipitation in conditions of dry or moderate PW. The GPM-CMB product tends to systematically report lower precipitation rates than the other two datasets. This intercomparison provides 1) modelers with an observational uncertainty and range (0.21?0.36 mm h?1 near the cyclone centers) when using composites of precipitation for model evaluation and 2) retrieval-algorithm developers with a categorical analysis of the sensitivity of the products to PW.
publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
titleObservational Constraint for Precipitation in Extratropical Cyclones: Sensitivity to Data Sources
typeJournal Paper
journal volume57
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology
identifier doi10.1175/JAMC-D-17-0289.1
journal fristpage991
journal lastpage1009
treeJournal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology:;2018:;volume 057:;issue 004
contenttypeFulltext


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