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The global satellite mapping of precipitation (GSMaP) project
228
Citations
7
References
2005
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringWeather ForecastingFlood WarningEarth SciencePrecipitationGeospatial MappingNumerical Weather PredictionMeteorological MeasurementHydrometeorologyMeteorologyGlobal Precipitation FieldsSynthetic Aperture RadarGeographyMicrowave Remote SensingEarth Observation DataHydrologyGlobal Precipitation MeasurementClimatologyDroughtGlobal Satellite MappingRemote SensingSatellite Meteorology
Precipitation is one of the most important parameters on the earth system, and the global distribution of precipitation and its change are essential data for modeling the water cycle, maintaining the ecosystem environment, agricultural production, improvements of the weather forecast precision, flood warning and so on. In the GPM (Global Precipitation Measurement) project, the microwave radiometers observing microwave emission from rain will be placed on many low-orbit satellites, to reduce the interval to about 3 hours in observation time for each location on the earth. Although the GPM can provide the global precipitation fields with 3 hour resolution, the precipitation map with higher resolution (< 1 hour) is required for some operational users such as flash flood warning systems and also the monthly based precipitation map is required from the climatology studies. In this presentation, the GSMaP_MVK which is a product of surface rainfall rate with 0.1 degree and 1 hour resolution on a global basis and GSMaP_Gauge which is a gauge adjusted product to the GSMaP_MVK for climatological studies are introduced, focusing particularly on structure and performance of the algorithm and some initial evaluation tests.
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