Publication | Open Access
A Comparison of Automatic Rain Gauges
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1996
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Environmental MonitoringEngineeringEarth SciencePrecipitationMeteorological MeasurementHydrometeorologyMeteorologyGeographyRain Gauge SystemsRainwater HarvestingHydrologyWater BalanceClimatologyWeather ModificationWater ResourcesDroughtCivil EngineeringFlow IrregularitiesRainfall DataAutomatic Rain Gauges
Abstract Automatic rain gauge systems are required to collect rainfall data at remote locations, especially oceanic sites where logistics prevent regular visits. Rainfall data from six different types of automatic rain gauge systems have been collected for a set of summertime subtropical rain events and for a set of wintertime rain events at Miami, Florida. The rain gauge systems include three types of collection gauges: weighing, capacitance, and tipping bucket; two gauges that inherently measure rainfall rate: optical scintillation and underwater acoustical inversion; and one gauge that detects individual raindrops: the disdrometer. All of these measurement techniques perform well; that is, they produce rainfall estimates that are highly correlated to one another. However, each method has limitations. The collection gauges are affected by flow irregularities between the catchment basin and the measurement chambers. This affects the accuracy of rainfall-rate measurements from these instruments, especiall...