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  • 1
    ISSN: 1436-5065
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geography , Physics
    Notes: Summary The Advanced Microwave Precipitation Radiometer (AMPR), an across-track scanning, four-channel (10.7, 19.35, 37.1, 85.5 GHz) total-power radiometer system, was instrumented aboard a NASA ER-2 aircraft during the 1991 CaPE (Convection and Precipitation/Electrification) project in central Florida. At a 20 km flight altitude, the AMPR provides fine-scale microwave imagery of Earth surfaces and its atmosphere, and is well-suited for diverse hydrological applications. During overflights of precipitation, coincident ground-based radar measurements were taken with the NCAR CP-2 dual-frequency, dual-polarization radar system. After remapping the radar data into a format compatible with the AMPR scanning geometry, the radar-derived profiles of rain, melting, and frozen hydrometeors are compared against the AMPR equivalent blackbody brightness temperature (T B) imagery. Microwave radiative transfer modeling procedures incorporating the radar-derived hydrometeor profiles were used to simulated the multifrequency AMPR imagery over both land and ocean background ER-2 flights. Within storm cores over land, columnar ice water paths up to 20 kgm−2 gradually depressed the 85 GHzT B as low as 100 K. The presence of tall vertical reflectivity columns encompassing 〉 20 kgm−2 columnar ice water path often produced 37 GHzT B〈85 GHzT B directly over the core. Over ocean, the 10 GHz channel provided the clearest correlation with the rainfall amounts, whereas the 19 GHz channel saturated near 260 K past 10–15 mm hr−1 rain rate as determined by radar. Scattering by ice and melting ice at 37 GHz producedT B ambiguities over both raining and clear-ocean regions. Sensitivity to the columnar mixed phase region via the intermediate frequencies (19 and 37 GHz) is demonstrated and explained with the radar-derivedT B modeling. By superimposing vertical profiles of cloud liquid water (which this radar cannot measure) upon the radarinferred hydrometeor structure, additional information on the location of the peak cloud water and its amount relative to the vertical ice structure can be noted, along with a possible inference of the dominant ice particle size within the upper storm core. These results suggest that as the resolution of passive radiometric measurements approaches dimensions where the antenna beams become increasingly filled by the cloud, precipitation retrieval via multifrequencyT B input is well-suited to a vertical profiling-type algorithm. This is further examined in Part II of this manuscript, where the radarderived vertical hydrometeor profiles are used to test the applicability of a multispectral cloud model-based approach to passive microwave precipitation retrieval from space.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Combinations of both active and passive microwave sensors have been proposed for experiments such as the tropical rainfall measuring mission (TRMM). During the summer 1991 Convection and Precipitation/Electrification Experiment (CaPE) in central Florida, both cold- and warm-rain precipitation processes were studied with the NCAR CP-2 multiparameter radar, operating at 3 and 10 GHz. The Advanced Microwave Precipitation Radiometer (AMPR), which operates at 10.7, 19.35, 37.1, and 85.5 GHz, was flown aboard NASA's ER-2 high-altitude aircraft over storms being scanned by the CP-2 radar. Top-of-atmosphere multifrequency TB from the AMPR is presented along with coincident CP-2 radar observations. Joint analysis of both radar and radiometer data sets allows refinement of new and existing precipitation retrieval techniques which will utilize the multifrequency TB from an integrated spaceborne microwave radiometer/radar system.
    Keywords: METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY
    Type: In: IGARSS '92; Proceedings of the 12th Annual International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, Houston, TX, May 26-29, 1992. Vol. 2 (A93-47551 20-43); p. 1719-1721.
    Format: text
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