Estimation of Finescale Rainfall Fields Using Broadcast TV Satellite Links and a 4DVAR Assimilation Method

Author:

Mercier François1,Barthès Laurent1,Mallet Cécile1

Affiliation:

1. Université de Versailles Saint-Quentin-en-Yveline,Versailles, and Sorbonne Universites, UPMC University Paris 06, Paris, and CNRS/INSU, LATMOS-IPSL, Guyancourt, France

Abstract

AbstractThis study proposes a method based on the use of a set of commercial satellite-to-Earth microwave links to rebuild finescale rainfall fields. Such microwave links exist all over the world and can be used to estimate the integrated rain attenuation over the links’ first 5–7 km with a very high temporal resolution (10 s in the present case). The retrieval algorithm makes use of a four-dimensional variational data assimilation (4DVAR) method involving a numerical advection scheme. The advection velocity is recovered from the observations or from radar rainfall fields at successive time steps.This technique has been successively applied to simulated 2D rain maps and to real data recorded in the autumn of 2013 during the Hydrological Cycle in the Mediterranean Experiment (HyMeX), with one sensor receiving microwave signals from four different satellites. The performance of this system is assessed and is compared to an operational Météo-France radar and a network of 10 rain gauges. Because of the limitations of the propagation model, this study is limited to the events with strong advective characteristics (four out of eight recorded events). For these events (only), the method produces rainfall fields that are highly correlated with the radar maps at spatial resolutions greater than . The point-scale results are also satisfactory for temporal resolutions greater than 10 min (mean correlation with rain gauge data equal to approximately 0.8, similar to the correlation between radar and rain gauge data).This method can also be adapted to the fusion of a rain gauge with microwave link measurements and, through the use of several sensors, it has the potential of being applied to larger areas.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Ocean Engineering

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