A Study of Precipitation Occurrence Using Visual and Infrared Satellite Data.

Abstract

Bi-spectral satellite thresholds for precipitation specification are explored with visual and infrared satellite data collocated with Service-A hourly observations for 137 surface stations in the southeastern United States. The data span the month of August 1979 and total 70,623 observations, including 538 daylight precipitation observations. The distributional and statistical differences of four satellite resolution sizes ranging from 484 to 2025 nmi2 are explored and determined to be significant in the representation of weather conditions. Precipitation and no-precipitation data can be statistically differentiated with the visual and infrared mean and standard deviation values. For overcast ceiling reports, a simple linear bi-spectral threshold based on a 50% probability of precipitation is defined as extending from albedo 1.00 to 0.60 with associated cloud top temperatures 290K and 210K, respectively. For overcast and broken ceiling reports, and albedo greater than 0.80 specifies a 50% probability of precipitation. (Author)

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Dec 01, 1983
Accession Number
ADA141012

Entities

People

  • L. S. Paul

Organizations

  • Naval Postgraduate School

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Space

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Artificial Satellites
  • Cloud Cover
  • Clouds
  • Critical Temperature
  • Data Processing
  • Data Science
  • Databases
  • Information Science
  • Meteorology
  • Observation
  • Oceanography
  • Probability
  • Standards
  • Statistics
  • Transition Temperature
  • Two Dimensional
  • United States

Fields of Study

  • Environmental science

Readers

  • Atmospheric Science/Meteorology
  • Computational Linguistics
  • Vision Science/Vision Psychology/Cognitive Neuroscience.

Technology Areas

  • Space