Evaluation of GPROF V05 Precipitation Retrievals under Different Cloud Regimes

Author:

Tan Jackson12,Cho Nayeong12,Oreopoulos Lazaros2,Kirstetter Pierre345

Affiliation:

1. a Universities Space Research Association, Columbia, Maryland

2. b NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland

3. c School of Meteorology, University of Oklahoma, Norman

4. d School of Civil Engineering and Environmental Science, University of Oklahoma, Norman

5. e NOAA Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma

Abstract

AbstractPrecipitation retrievals from passive microwave satellite observations form the basis of many widely used precipitation products, but the performance of the retrievals depends on numerous factors such as surface type and precipitation variability. Previous evaluation efforts have identified bias dependence on precipitation regime, which may reflect the influence on retrievals of recurring factors. In this study, the concept of a regime-based evaluation of precipitation from the Goddard Profiling (GPROF) algorithm is extended to cloud regimes. Specifically, GPROF V05 precipitation retrievals under four different cloud regimes are evaluated against ground radars over the United States. GPROF is generally able to accurately retrieve the precipitation associated with both organized convection and less organized storms, which collectively produce a substantial fraction of global precipitation. However, precipitation from stratocumulus systems is underestimated over land and overestimated over water. Similarly, precipitation associated with trade cumulus environments is underestimated over land, while biases over water depend on the sensor’s channel configuration. By extending the evaluation to more sensors and suppressed environments, these results complement insights previously obtained from precipitation regimes, thus demonstrating the potential of cloud regimes in categorizing the global atmosphere into discrete systems.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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