Literature DB >> 32655334

Satellite Estimation of Falling Snow: A Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Core Observatory Perspective.

Gail Skofronick-Jackson1, Mark Kulie2, Lisa Milani3, Stephen J Munchak1, Norman B Wood4, Vincenzo Levizzani3.   

Abstract

Retrievals of falling snow from space-based observations represent key inputs for understanding and linking Earth's atmospheric, hydrological, and energy cycles. This work quantifies and investigates causes of differences among the first stable falling snow retrieval products from the Global precipitation Measurement (GPM) Core Observatory satellite and CloudSat's Cloud Profiling Radar (CPR) falling snow product. An important part of this analysis details the challenges associated with comparing the various GPM and CloudSat snow estimates arising from different snow-rain classification methods, orbits, resolutions, sampling, instrument specifications, and algorithm assumptions. After equalizing snow-rain classification methodologies and limiting latitudinal extent, CPR observes nearly 10 (3) times the occurrence (accumulation) of falling snow as GPM's Dual-Frequency Precipitation Radar (DPR). The occurrence disparity is substantially reduced if CloudSat pixels are averaged to simulate DPR radar pixels and CPR observations are truncated below the 8-dBZ reflectivity threshold. However, even though the truncated CPR- and DPR-based data have similar falling snow occurrences, average snowfall rate from the truncated CPR record remains significantly higher (43%) than the DPR, indicating that retrieval assumptions (microphysics and snow scattering properties) are quite different. Diagnostic reflectivity (Z)-snow rate (S) relationships were therefore developed at Ku and W band using the same snow scattering properties and particle size distributions in a final effort to minimize algorithm differences. CPR-DPR snowfall amount differences were reduced to ~16% after adopting this diagnostic Z-S approach.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 32655334      PMCID: PMC7351104          DOI: 10.1175/JAMC-D-18-0124.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Appl Meteorol Climatol        ISSN: 1558-8424            Impact factor:   2.923


  2 in total

1.  THE GLOBAL PRECIPITATION MEASUREMENT (GPM) MISSION FOR SCIENCE AND SOCIETY.

Authors:  Gail Skofronick-Jackson; Walter A Petersen; Wesley Berg; Chris Kidd; Erich F Stocker; Dalia B Kirschbaum; Ramesh Kakar; Scott A Braun; George J Huffman; Toshio Iguchi; Pierre E Kirstetter; Christian Kummerow; Robert Meneghini; Riko Oki; William S Olson; Yukari N Takayabu; Kinji Furukawa; Thomas Wilheit
Journal:  Bull Am Meteorol Soc       Date:  2017-09-06       Impact factor: 8.766

2.  So, how much of the Earth's surface is covered by rain gauges?

Authors:  Chris Kidd; Andreas Becker; George J Huffman; Catherine L Muller; Paul Joe; Gail Skofronick-Jackson; Dalia B Kirschbaum
Journal:  Bull Am Meteorol Soc       Date:  2017-01-23       Impact factor: 8.766

  2 in total
  2 in total

Review 1.  Spaceborne Cloud and Precipitation Radars: Status, Challenges, and Ways Forward.

Authors:  Alessandro Battaglia; Pavlos Kollias; Ranvir Dhillon; Richard Roy; Simone Tanelli; Katia Lamer; Mircea Grecu; Matthew Lebsock; Daniel Watters; Kamil Mroz; Gerald Heymsfield; Lihua Li; Kinji Furukawa
Journal:  Rev Geophys       Date:  2020-07-13       Impact factor: 22.000

2.  Extreme Lake-Effect Snow from a GPM Microwave Imager Perspective: Observational Analysis and Precipitation Retrieval Evaluation.

Authors:  Lisa Milani; Mark S Kulie; Daniele Casella; Pierre E Kirstetter; Giulia Panegrossi; Veljko Petkovic; Sarah E Ringerud; Jean-François Rysman; Paolo Sanò; Nai-Yu Wang; Yalei You; Gail Skofronick-Jackson
Journal:  J Atmos Ocean Technol       Date:  2021-02-12       Impact factor: 2.075

  2 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.