How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia?

We investigated the potential of the new generation of satellite precipitation product from the Global Precipitation Mission (GPM) to characterize the rainfall in Malaysia. Most satellite precipitation products have limited ability to precisely characterize the high dynamic rainfall variation that o...

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Main Authors: Mahmud, M. R., Hashim, M., Reba, M. N. M.
Format: Article
Published: Korean Meteorological Society 2017
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/75416/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85028656094&doi=10.1007%2fs13143-017-0042-3&partnerID=40&md5=4a30cf076a48b620c44802e51f2eb1a4
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spelling my.utm.754162018-03-22T11:08:14Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/75416/ How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia? Mahmud, M. R. Hashim, M. Reba, M. N. M. QD Chemistry We investigated the potential of the new generation of satellite precipitation product from the Global Precipitation Mission (GPM) to characterize the rainfall in Malaysia. Most satellite precipitation products have limited ability to precisely characterize the high dynamic rainfall variation that occurred at both time and scale in this humid tropical region due to the coarse grid size to meet the physical condition of the smaller land size, sub-continent and islands. Prior to the status quo, an improved satellite precipitation was required to accurately measure the rainfall and its distribution. Subsequently, the newly released of GPM precipitation product at half-hourly and 0.1° resolution served an opportunity to anticipate the aforementioned conflict. Nevertheless, related evidence was not found and therefore, this study made an initiative to fill the gap. A total of 843 rain gauges over east (Borneo) and west Malaysia (Peninsular) were used to evaluate the rainfall the GPM rainfall data. The assessment covered all critical rainy seasons which associated with Asian Monsoon including northeast (Nov. - Feb.), southwest (May - Aug.) and their subsequent inter-monsoon period (Mar. - Apr. & Sep. - Oct.). The ability of GPM to provide quantitative rainfall estimates and qualitative spatial rainfall patterns were analysed. Our results showed that the GPM had good capacity to depict the spatial rainfall patterns in less heterogeneous rainfall patterns (Spearman’s correlation, 0.591 to 0.891) compared to the clustered one (r = 0.368 to 0.721). Rainfall intensity and spatial heterogeneity that is largely driven by seasonal monsoon has significant influence on GPM ability to resolve local rainfall patterns. In quantitative rainfall estimation, large errors can be primarily associated with the rainfall intensity increment. 77% of the error variation can be explained through rainfall intensity particularly the high intensity (> 35 mm d-1). A strong relationship between GPM rainfall and error was found from heavy (~35 mm d-1) to violent rain (160 mm d-1). The output of this study provides reference regarding the performance of GPM data for respective hydrology studies in this region. Korean Meteorological Society 2017 Article PeerReviewed Mahmud, M. R. and Hashim, M. and Reba, M. N. M. (2017) How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia? Asia-Pacific Journal of Atmospheric Sciences, 53 (3). pp. 375-384. ISSN 1976-7633 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85028656094&doi=10.1007%2fs13143-017-0042-3&partnerID=40&md5=4a30cf076a48b620c44802e51f2eb1a4
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic QD Chemistry
spellingShingle QD Chemistry
Mahmud, M. R.
Hashim, M.
Reba, M. N. M.
How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia?
description We investigated the potential of the new generation of satellite precipitation product from the Global Precipitation Mission (GPM) to characterize the rainfall in Malaysia. Most satellite precipitation products have limited ability to precisely characterize the high dynamic rainfall variation that occurred at both time and scale in this humid tropical region due to the coarse grid size to meet the physical condition of the smaller land size, sub-continent and islands. Prior to the status quo, an improved satellite precipitation was required to accurately measure the rainfall and its distribution. Subsequently, the newly released of GPM precipitation product at half-hourly and 0.1° resolution served an opportunity to anticipate the aforementioned conflict. Nevertheless, related evidence was not found and therefore, this study made an initiative to fill the gap. A total of 843 rain gauges over east (Borneo) and west Malaysia (Peninsular) were used to evaluate the rainfall the GPM rainfall data. The assessment covered all critical rainy seasons which associated with Asian Monsoon including northeast (Nov. - Feb.), southwest (May - Aug.) and their subsequent inter-monsoon period (Mar. - Apr. & Sep. - Oct.). The ability of GPM to provide quantitative rainfall estimates and qualitative spatial rainfall patterns were analysed. Our results showed that the GPM had good capacity to depict the spatial rainfall patterns in less heterogeneous rainfall patterns (Spearman’s correlation, 0.591 to 0.891) compared to the clustered one (r = 0.368 to 0.721). Rainfall intensity and spatial heterogeneity that is largely driven by seasonal monsoon has significant influence on GPM ability to resolve local rainfall patterns. In quantitative rainfall estimation, large errors can be primarily associated with the rainfall intensity increment. 77% of the error variation can be explained through rainfall intensity particularly the high intensity (> 35 mm d-1). A strong relationship between GPM rainfall and error was found from heavy (~35 mm d-1) to violent rain (160 mm d-1). The output of this study provides reference regarding the performance of GPM data for respective hydrology studies in this region.
format Article
author Mahmud, M. R.
Hashim, M.
Reba, M. N. M.
author_facet Mahmud, M. R.
Hashim, M.
Reba, M. N. M.
author_sort Mahmud, M. R.
title How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia?
title_short How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia?
title_full How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia?
title_fullStr How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia?
title_full_unstemmed How effective is the new generation of GPM satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over Malaysia?
title_sort how effective is the new generation of gpm satellite precipitation in characterizing the rainfall variability over malaysia?
publisher Korean Meteorological Society
publishDate 2017
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/75416/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85028656094&doi=10.1007%2fs13143-017-0042-3&partnerID=40&md5=4a30cf076a48b620c44802e51f2eb1a4
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score 13.160551