Comparison of Radar Data from the TRMM Satellite and Kwajalein Oceanic Validation Site

Data from the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) precipitation radar (PR) and Kwajalein S-band validation radar (KR) agree well for reflectivity exceeding the sensitivity of the PR threshold ( ;17 dBZ). For echoes above this intensity threshold, the products derived from reflectivity, particularly maps of rainfall rate and convective/stratiform classification, compare well, even though slightly different convective‐stratiform separation techniques and different reflectivity‐rainfall rate ( Z‐R) relations are used for the PR and KR. The KR observations indicate the PR misses only 2.3% of near-surface rainfall but 46% of near-surface rain area ( $0 dBZ) because of its 17-dBZ threshold. The PR senses less than 15% of the echo area observed by the KR above 5-km altitude (i.e., above the 08C level). Thus, the PR highly undersamples weaker echoes associated with stratiform rain near the surface and ice particles aloft but still manages to capture most of the near-surface precipitation accumulation. The temporal sampling of the TRMM PR accurately captures the KR’s overall frequency distribution of reflectivity and its subdivision into convective and stratiform components. However, diurnal and latitudinal variations of precipitation in the vicinity of Kwajalein are not well sampled.

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