Title of article :
A survey of studies into errors in large scale space-time averages of rainfall, cloud cover, sea surface processes and the earthʹs radiation budget as derived from low earth orbit satellite instruments because of their incomplete temporal and spatial cove
Abstract :
This survey considers those studies conducted into estimating errors in satellite derived
large scale space-time means (of the order of 250 km by 250 km by a month) for rainfall, cloud cover,
sea surface processes and the Earth’s radiation budget, resulting from their incomplete coverage
of the space-time volume over which the mean is evaluated. Many of these studies have focused
on estimating the errors in space-time means post satellite launch and compare mean data derived
from such satellites with that from an independent data set. Pre-launch studies tend to involve
computer simulations of a satellite overflying and sampling from an existing data set and hence the
two approaches give values for sampling errors for specific cases. However, more generic sampling
papers exist that allow the exact evaluation of sampling errors for any instrument or combination of
instruments if their sampling characteristics and the auto-correlation of the parameter field are known.
These generic and simulation techniques have been used together on the same data sets and are found
to give very similar values for the sampling error and are presented. Also considered are studies
in which data from several satellites, or satellite and ground based measurements are combined to
improve estimates in the above means. This improvement being brought about not only by increased
spatial and temporal coverage but also by a reduction in retrieval error.