Abstract

This study quantitatively estimated the precipitation associated with a typhoon in the northwestern Pacific Ocean by using a physical algorithm which included the Weather Research and Forecasting model, Radiative Transfer for TIROS Operational Vertical Sounder model, and data from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM)/TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI) and TRMM/Precipitation Radar (PR). First, a prior probability distribution function (PDF) was constructed using over three million rain rate retrievals from the TRMM/PR data for the period 2002–2010 over the northwestern Pacific Ocean. Subsequently, brightness temperatures for 15 typhoons that occurred over the northwestern Pacific Ocean were simulated using a microwave radiative transfer model and a conditional PDF was obtained for these typhoons. The aforementioned physical algorithm involved using a posterior PDF. A posterior PDF was obtained by combining the prior and conditional PDFs. Finally, the rain rate associated with a typhoon was estimated by inputting the observations of the TMI (attenuation indices at 10, 19, 37 GHz) into the posterior PDF (lookup table). Results based on rain rate retrievals indicated that rainband locations with the heaviest rainfall showed qualitatively similar horizontal distributions. The correlation coefficient and root-mean-square error of the rain rate estimation were 0.63 and 4.45 mm·h−1, respectively. Furthermore, the correlation coefficient and root-mean-square error for convective rainfall were 0.78 and 7.25 mm·h−1, respectively, and those for stratiform rainfall were 0.58 and 9.60 mm·h−1, respectively. The main contribution of this study is introducing an approach to quickly and accurately estimate the typhoon precipitation, and remove the need for complex calculations.

Highlights

  • The precipitation of typhoons at the early stages can be estimated by satellites by using visible (VIS)and infrared (IR) channels

  • Scientists have established the regression relation between the passive microwave brightness temperature (TB) and the actual rain rate; an observed TB can be input into the regression relation to estimate the RR [1,2]

  • In the precipitation estimation method proposed in this study, the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model is used to simulate the vertical hydrometeor distribution of a typhoon over the western Pacific

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Summary

Introduction

The precipitation of typhoons at the early stages can be estimated by satellites by using visible (VIS). VIS channels are used only during daytime. IR channels are affected by cloud layers and, data for the region below the cloud top cannot be collected. Unlike IR channels, passive microwave channels enable observing precipitation conditions below clouds. Scientists have established the regression relation between the passive microwave brightness temperature (TB) and the actual rain rate (rain rate, RR); an observed TB can be input into the regression relation to estimate the RR [1,2]. Past studies have mentioned various methods in which passive microwave channels are used to estimate the precipitation intensity after 1990 [3,4,5,6,7,8]

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