Abstract

AbstractThis study compares rainfall from NASA Integrated Multi‐satellitE Retrievals for Global Precipitation Measurement (IMERG V06) and JAXA Global Satellite Mapping of Precipitation (GSMaP V4) for tropical cyclone (TC) applications against satellite microwave‐derived Goddard Profiling Algorithm (GPROF V05) precipitation data retrieved from 2000 to 2012. From a global data set of storms, all three products show consistent patterns in 1‐dimensional azimuthal averages and in 2‐dimensional rainfall distributions (where spatial correlation values are near 1.0). However, both IMERG and GSMaP overestimate precipitation amounts against GPROF, and IMERG overestimations are much higher than GSMaP within 125 km of the storm center. Based on this analysis, IMERG and GSMaP rainfall could be used to analyze TC precipitation patterns at high spatiotemporal resolutions. However, caution is required if high accuracy TC precipitation amplitude is required, particularly for IMERG. This study highlights opportunities to improve future versions of IMERG and GSMaP retrieval processing to reduce the discrepancies with GPROF.

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