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Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid- latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

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Page 1: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Validation of Satellite Rainfall

Estimates over the Mid-latitudes

Chris Kidd

University of Birmingham, UK

Page 2: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

The European Context

Geographically diverse• Large extent of coastlines and interiors• Plains & mountains• Variable background – snow cover, sand etc.

Meteorologically diverse – hence climatologically• Maritime and continental influences• Stratiform vs convective precipitation• Seasonal variations – frigid vs stifling temperatures

Plenty of light rain intensities…

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 3: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

The European

Region

Page 4: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

3B40 3B41 3B42

CMORPH

ECMWF

CPCMW

Validation Data

Europeanradar data

Production of web pages

Statistics at 20km and 50km

Remap data to PSG

Data Products

Raw Data

Data processing

PMWIR

GPIPMIR FDA

Data processing

Page 5: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Results generation

Visual analysis• Imagery of observations and estimates

In addition:• Cumulative distribution of accumulation• Analysis of occurrence of precipitation• Cumulative distribution of occurrence by intensities

Descriptive statistics• Contingency tables, conditional rain rates

Statistical analysis• Bias, ratio, RMSE, Correlation, Heidke score etc

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 6: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

IPWG European validation

Page 7: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Resampled/remapped imagery

Page 8: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Scatterplot

Page 9: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Rainfall intensity distribution

Page 10: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Occurrence of rainfall by intensity

Page 11: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Accumulation of rainfall by intensity

Page 12: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Statistics

Page 13: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK
Page 14: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK
Page 15: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

21-day moving average

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 16: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Ratio of occurrence >0 (21-day)

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 17: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Ratio of occurrence >1 (21-day)

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 18: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Rainfall ratio (21-day)

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 19: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Heidke Score >=0 (21-day)

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 20: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Heidke Score >=1 (21-day)

Page 21: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Initial results

• Satellite observations show significant seasonality

• Rainfall occurrence is underestimated, except by the ECMWF model reanalysis (resolution?)

• Model results suggest an element of inconsistency

• Day-to-day variations in performance are large

and…

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 22: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Future strategy

Broaden range of algorithms/products• (more please!)

Back-date study as far as possible• (radar/gauge and algorithm radar)

Include other radar data where available• (Baltex, Spain, Italy?)

Incorporate gauge data when available• (available <1999 for UK, European?)

BUT….

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 23: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Light rainfall detection

An algorithm with a rain/no-rain boundary of 1mm/hr should underestimate the rainfall by the contribution of rainfall below 1mm/hr

• Algorithms that cannot identify all the rain should underestimate rainfall totals

• Algorithms that are bias-corrected must compensate the lack of light-rainfall contribution with rainfall at higher intensities – i.e. they will underestimate the low rainfall and overestimate high rainfall.

(In reality algorithms might detect some light rain, but not all)

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 24: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

radar e40 3B40 3B41 3B42

“Ideal” algorithms

All algorithms produce identical results to any validation data set…

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Acc

umul

atio

n

Page 25: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

radare40

3B40

3B41 3B42

… reality

Algorithms tend to be tuned to minimise the longer-term biases – but are they ‘correct’?

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Acc

umul

atio

n

Page 26: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

radare40

3B40

3B41 3B42

Rainfall accumulation

The make-up of the ‘intensities’ to the total is of critical importance:

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Acc

umul

atio

n

Page 27: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

radare40

3B40

3B41 3B42

Rainfall accumulation

The make-up of the ‘intensities’ to the total is very important:

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Acc

umul

atio

n

Page 28: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Jan2004

Feb2004

Mar2004

Apr2004

May2004

Jun2004

Accumulation of precipitation

Radar e40 3B40 3B41 3B42 Radar e40 3B40 3B41 3B42 Radar e40 3B40 3B41 3B42

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 29: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Jan 2004 Feb 2004 Mar 2004

Apr 2004 May 2004 Jun 2004

Occurrence of precipitation

Radar e40 3B40 3B41 3B42 Radar e40 3B40 3B41 3B42

Radar e40 3B40 3B41 3B42

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 30: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Accumulation of precipitation

<1 mm/hr

<2 mm/hr

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 31: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Occurrence of precipitation

<1 mm/hr

<2 mm/hr

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 32: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Rain/no-rain induced biases

TRMM 2A25 data

mean rainrates mean rainrates > thresholds

Generate ‘global’ ratio

Bias (ratio) correct mean rainrates

Plot grid-sized ratios

Page 33: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

-0.5

Rain/no-rain induced biases

-1.0-2.0-4.0

• Differences in rain/no-rain boundaries reveal regional variations that do not exist in reality• Further complicated since rain/no-rain boundaries tend to differ over land/sea areas

2nd IPWG working group workshop, Monterey, CA. 25-28 October 2004

Page 34: Validation of Satellite Rainfall Estimates over the Mid-latitudes Chris Kidd University of Birmingham, UK

Recommendations

• There is a need to identify regions over which climate change can be observed with a high degree of confidence

• Parameters need to be chosen that can be retrieved with a high degree of confidence – basic ones means that the causes of changes can be understood

• Cross-talk between parameters needs to be reduced as much as possible

• Long-term changes need to consider RFI contamination, particularly for coastal regions