Abstracts for the 6th International GAME Conf.

3-5 December 2004

Kyoto Japan


Regional Diurnal Variations of Precipitation Parameters Observed with Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) Microwave imager (TMI) and TRMM Precipitation Radar (PR)

Fumie Akimoto Furuzawa (1), Kenji Nakamura (1)

Satellite observations of precipitation from space can get continuous, simultaneous and global informations. These global observations of rainfall activities with satellites are important because measurements of rainfall all over the ocean or tropical forest can be hardly done by ground-based observations. The TRMM satellite can detect directly obscured precipitation under the clouds by using microwave more exactly than other infrared or optical satellites. TRMM satellite has two microwave sensors; a precipitation radar (PR) and a TRMM microwave imager (TMI). The PR is an active radar which can determine 3 dimensional structure of precipitation system and precipitation parameters such as storm type and storm height. The rain rate is derived from TMI brightness temperatures and PR radar reflectivities, separately. We analyzed the PR and TMI data over the ocean, land and coastlines by using the global each-passage data for June 1998, December 1998 - February 1999 (DJF) and obtained some results as follows. The PR reveals that 1) rainfall with a low storm height over land is dominant in winter or from 6 LT to 14 LT. There exists a convective rain more frequently from 12 LT to 20 LT and a stratiform rain exists more frequently in winter and from 6 LT to 8 LT. 2) drop size of precipitation has many larger drops from 18 LT to 24 LT for both convective and stratiform rains over the ocean and land on June and for both convective and stratiform rains over land on DJF. The diurnal variation is small over the ocean on DJF. Moreover it has many larger drops at tropics and especially lower in winter midlatitude, regardless of over the ocean and land on June and DJF. Especially, small size of precipitations are dominant over Tibetan plateau and the Andes. 3) monthly rainfall amount is the maximum at 19 LT on June and 15 LT on DJF over land, though TMI shows that the time is delayed a few hours. Difference between PR and TMI diurnal variations of rainfall rate is appeared from 10 LT to 17 LT and TMI rainfall rate is smaller than PR at the period. This is probably due to frequently appeared convective rain and/or frequently appeared shallow rain, as shallow rains have smaller TMI rainfall rate than PR and convective rains have also smaller TMI rainfall rate. Moreover, this period is coincident with the period without many large rain drops. This may imply that the TMI underestimates the surface rainfall rate at the case of rainfall without many large drops. We will discuss about the relationship on characteristics of rainfall and rainfall rates derived from PR and TMI.

Submittal Information

Name : Date :
    Fumie Akimoto Furuzawa
    09-Aug-04-16:38:29
Organization : Theme :
    Hydrospheric Atmospheric Research Center (HyARC), Nagoya Univ.
    Theme 8
Address : Presentation :
    Furo-cho, Chikusa-ku, Nagoya 464-8601
    Poster or oral
Country : Abstract ID :
    Japan
    T8FAF09Aug04163829
Phone : Fax :
    +81-52-789-5467
    +81-52-789-3436
E-mail :
    akimoto@hyarc.nagoya-u.ac.jp