Abstract

The relationship of the rainfall from convective clouds to area-time integrals determined from satellite infrared data using a fixed infrared-temperature threshold is investigated. Concurrent radar and rapid-scan satellite data obtained during field projects in the northern High Plains and the southeastern United States were used in this study. The fixed IR threshold appropriate for each region was determined by an optimization procedure that identified the brightness threshold that yields the strongest relationship between estimated rainfall from a cloud cluster and its satellite Area-Time Integral (ATI) for each dataset. For the North Dakota-Montana area the optimization procedure indicated that the area enclosed by the -22.5 C isotherm provides satellite ATI values most closely related to the estimated rainfalls. For the southeastern United States project, the optimized tem- perature threshold was 8.5'C. The difference between the thresholds determined for the two geographic areas suggests that a different 'calibration' for each distinct area may be needed to make use of this relationship. Slopes of the two log-log rainfall-ATI regressions are less than unity, indicating that a relative horizontal expansion and/or increase in persistence of a cloud cluster exceeds the associated increase in precipitation. Implications for the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite precipitation index are discussed. New results concerning the rain volume-radar ATI relationship for the southeastern United States are also appended to the paper.

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