Title :
Continuous rainfall derived from combined spaceborne microwave, IR and ground based sferics measurements
Author :
Morales, C.A. ; Weinman, J.A. ; Kriz, S.J.
Author_Institution :
Maryland Univ., College Park, MD, USA
Abstract :
Infra-red (IR) images from geostationary satellites have provided continuous information on stratiform rainfall distributions and lightning flash rates have been shown to be proportional to convective rainfall rates. Lightning emits radio noise, known as sferics, at frequencies between 5 and 15 kHz that propagates over thousands of km. Sferics distributions in a region bounded by northern Alberta, equatorial America and the eastern Atlantic have been monitored nearly continuously by a network of five sferics receivers since mid-1997. An IR-sferics rainfall retrieval algorithm was empirically tuned with more definitive, albeit sparse, spaceborne microwave measurements to derive continuous rainfall measurements. Rainfall distributions from combined microwave-IR-sferics measurements are compared to conventional rainfall observations obtained from equatorial America
Keywords :
atmospherics; lightning; rain; remote sensing; 5 to 15 kHz; America; IR images; IR-sferics rainfall retrieval algorithm; W Atlantic Ocean; continuous rainfall measurements; convective rainfall rates; geostationary satellites; ground based sferics measurements; lightning flash rates; radio noise; spaceborne microwave measurements; stratiform rainfall distributions; Argon; Extraterrestrial measurements; Lightning; Microwave measurements; NASA; Optical propagation; Radar imaging; Satellite broadcasting; Sea measurements; Spaceborne radar;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium Proceedings, 1998. IGARSS '98. 1998 IEEE International
Conference_Location :
Seattle, WA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4403-0
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.1998.692422