4.5 Article

Comparisons of IMERG Version 06 Precipitation at and between Passive Microwave Overpasses in the Tropics

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROMETEOROLOGY
Volume 22, Issue 8, Pages 2117-2130

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JHM-D-20-0226.1

Keywords

Tropics; Mesoscale systems; Precipitation; Satellite observations; Field experiments

Funding

  1. NASA (Univ. of Utah) [NNX17AG74G]
  2. GPM mission

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The study highlights the strong dependency of IMERG precipitation products on passive microwave observations, with potential for producing spurious precipitation areas in the absence of such observations. Bulk statistics reveal systematic biases in IMERG Version 06, indicating deficiencies in the Kalman filter scheme. Further development of the Scheme for Histogram Adjustment with Ranked Precipitation Estimates in the Neighborhood (SHARPEN) is proposed to address these issues in the next version.
The Integrated Multisatellite Retrievals for Global Precipitation Measurement Mission (IMERG) is a global precipitation product that uses precipitation retrievals from the virtual constellation of satellites with passive microwave (PMW) sensors, as available. In the absence of PMW observations, IMERG uses a Kalman filter scheme to morph precipitation from one PMW observation to the next. In this study, an analysis of convective systems observed during the Convective Process Experiment (CPEX) suggests that IMERG precipitation depends more strongly on the availability of PMW observations than previously suspected. Following this evidence, we explore systematic biases in IMERG through bulk statistics. In two CPEX case studies, cloud photographs, pilot's radar, and infrared imagery suggest that IMERG represents the spatial extent of precipitation relatively well when there is a PMW observation but sometimes produces spurious precipitation areas in the absence of PMW observations. Also, considering an observed convective system as a precipitation object in IMERG, the maximum rain rate peaked during PMW overpasses, with lower values between them. Bulk statistics reveal that these biases occur throughout IMERG Version 06. We find that locations and times without PMW observations have a higher frequency of light precipitation rates and a lower frequency of heavy precipitation rates due to retrieval artifacts. These results reveal deficiencies in the IMERG Kalman filter scheme, which have led to the development of the Scheme for Histogram Adjustment with Ranked Precipitation Estimates in the Neighborhood (SHARPEN; described in a companion paper) that will be applied in the next version of IMERG.

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