How well do multi-satellite products capture the space-time dynamics of precipitation? Part I: five products assessed via a wavenumber-frequency decomposition

Author:

Guilloteau Clement1,Foufoula-Georgiou Efi12,Kirstetter Pierre34,Tan Jackson56,Huffman George J.5

Affiliation:

1. 1 Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of California, Irvine

2. 2 Department of Earth System Science, University of California, Irvine

3. 3 Hydrometeorology and Remote Sensing Laboratory, University of Oklahoma, Norman

4. 4 NOAA Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma

5. 5 NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland

6. 6 Universities Space Research Association, Columbia, Maryland

Abstract

AbstractAs more global satellite-derived precipitation products become available, it is imperative to evaluate them more carefully for providing guidance as to how well precipitation space-time features are captured for use in hydrologic modeling, climate studies and other applications. Here we propose a space-time Fourier spectral analysis and define a suite of metrics which evaluate the spatial organization of storm systems, the propagation speed and direction of precipitation features, and the space-time scales at which a satellite product reproduces the variability of a reference “ground-truth” product (“effective resolution”). We demonstrate how the methodology relates to our physical intuition using the case study of a storm system with rich space-time structure. We then evaluate five high-resolution multi-satellite products (CMORPH, GSMaP, IMERG-early, IMERG-final and PERSIANN-CCS) over a period of two years over the southeastern US. All five satellite products show generally consistent space-time power spectral density when compared to a reference ground gauge-radar dataset (GV-MRMS), revealing agreement in terms of average morphology and dynamics of precipitation systems. However, a deficit of spectral power at wavelengths shorter than 200 km and periods shorter than 4 h reveals that all satellite products are excessively “smooth”. The products also show low levels of spectral coherence with the gauge-radar reference at these fine scales, revealing discrepancies in capturing the location and timing of precipitation features. From the space-time spectral coherence, the IMERG-final product shows superior ability in resolving the space-time dynamics of precipitation down to 200 km and 4 h scales compared to the other products.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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