Abstract

AbstractIn this study, we have developed a global in situ daily precipitation dataset based on quasi‐real‐time sub‐daily observations of precipitation totals for the 0000–0000 UTC (Co‐ordinated Universal Time) day everywhere in the world. The sub‐daily precipitation data from meteorological stations are obtained via the World Meteorological Organization's (WMO) Global Telecommunication System (GTS) and China Meteorological Administration Net (CMANet) archived by the National Meteorological Information Centre (NMIC) in China and the Integrated Surface Database (ISD) released by the National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) in the USA. We have combined these three sources into a global dataset, referred to as NMIC. Accumulated precipitation totals (depending on the country and the WMO region) are transmitted at a variety of times on the GTS. Of these, about 4,500 stations report daily for the 0000–0000 UTC day. Here, we significantly add to this, by developing two‐way accumulation algorithms to decompose other reported sub‐daily totals to shorter intervals, and then re‐cumulate them where possible to the 0000–0000 UTC day. Using these algorithms, we increase by 51.1% of the number of stations during 2009–2016 to around 6,800 day−1. Additionally, date boundary adjustment (sliding between 1 and 6 hours either side of 0000 UTC) raises the data volume to between 7,800 and 8,700 day−1. We compare our NMIC product with the First Guess Daily (FGD) product from the Global Precipitation Climatology Centre (GPCC) and GHCN‐Daily from NCEI (National Centers for Environmental Information). Root mean square differences between our NMIC and GPCC FGD products over the 2009–2016 period are around 3.4–3.7 mm·day−1 and the average consistency percentage is about 75.1–76.8%. Greater differences between NMIC and GHCN‐daily are found which are probably due to the non‐uniform date boundary in GHCN‐Daily.

Highlights

  • Global in situ daily precipitation measurements provide basic data for investigations of the global water cycle, energy balance and other research areas (IPCC, 2014)

  • We compare the results from our National Meteorological Information Centre (NMIC) First Guess Daily (FGD) dataset, with those from Global Precipitation Climatology Centre (GPCC)'s FGD precipitation data product

  • The daily products from NMIC and GPCC will be identified by their organization, with the date boundary adjustment of NMIC product given in the parenthesis

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Summary

Introduction

Global in situ daily precipitation measurements provide basic data for investigations of the global water cycle, energy balance and other research areas (IPCC, 2014). The First Guess Daily product (Schamm et al, 2014) developed by the Global Precipitation Climatology Centre (GPCC) and the Global Summary of the Day (GSOD) released by the National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI, 2017) are two of the widely used global quasi-real-time daily precipitation products The former uses surface synoptic observational (SYNOP) reports transmitted by the World Meteorological Organization's (WMO) Global Telecommunication System (GTS) as its main data source and cumulates (where necessary) subdaily totals (1, 3, 6, 12, 18 or 24-hr) to a daily sum for the climatological day for each station. In China, the National Climate Center (Nie et al, 2011) established a global daily precipitation dataset based on the 24-hr cumulative precipitation from the SYNOP messages transmitted by the WMO GTS, and conducted quality control, inspection, and evaluation of these data

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