Comparison of Global Precipitation Estimates across a Range of Temporal and Spatial Scales

Author:

Gehne Maria1,Hamill Thomas M.2,Kiladis George N.2,Trenberth Kevin E.3

Affiliation:

1. Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado

2. Physical Sciences Division, NOAA/Earth System Research Laboratory, Boulder, Colorado

3. National Center for Atmospheric Research,a Boulder, Colorado

Abstract

Abstract Characteristics of precipitation estimates for rate and amount from three global high-resolution precipitation products (HRPPs), four global climate data records (CDRs), and four reanalyses are compared. All datasets considered have at least daily temporal resolution. Estimates of global precipitation differ widely from one product to the next, with some differences likely due to differing goals in producing the estimates. HRPPs are intended to produce the best snapshot of the precipitation estimate locally. CDRs of precipitation emphasize homogeneity over instantaneous accuracy. Precipitation estimates from global reanalyses are dynamically consistent with the large-scale circulation but tend to compare poorly to rain gauge estimates since they are forecast by the reanalysis system and precipitation is not assimilated. Regional differences among the estimates in the means and variances are as large as the means and variances, respectively. Even with similar monthly totals, precipitation rates vary significantly among the estimates. Temporal correlations among datasets are large at annual and daily time scales, suggesting that compensating bias errors at annual and random errors at daily time scales dominate the differences. However, the signal-to-noise ratio at intermediate (monthly) time scales can be large enough to result in high correlations overall. It is shown that differences on annual time scales and continental regions are around 0.8 mm day−1, which corresponds to 23 W m−2. These wide variations in the estimates, even for global averages, highlight the need for better constrained precipitation products in the future.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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