Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Guilloteau C., Roca R., Gosset Marielle. (2016). A multiscale evaluation of the detection capabilities of high-resolution satellite precipitation products in West Africa. Journal of Hydrometeorology, 17 (7), p. 2041-2059. ISSN 1525-755X.

Titre du document
A multiscale evaluation of the detection capabilities of high-resolution satellite precipitation products in West Africa
Année de publication
2016
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000380342100009
Auteurs
Guilloteau C., Roca R., Gosset Marielle
Source
Journal of Hydrometeorology, 2016, 17 (7), p. 2041-2059 ISSN 1525-755X
Validation studies have assessed the accuracy of satellite-based precipitation estimates at coarse scale (18 and 1 day or coarser) in the tropics, but little is known about their ability to capture the finescale variability of precipitation. Rain detection masks derived from four multisatellite passive sensor products [Tropical Amount of Precipitation with an Estimate of Errors (TAPEER), PERSIANN-CCS, CMORPH, and GSMaP] are evaluated against ground radar data in Burkina Faso. The multiscale evaluation is performed down to 2.8 km and 15 min through discrete wavelet transform. The comparison of wavelet coefficients allows identification of the scales for which the precipitation fraction (fraction of space and time that is rainy) derived from satellite observations is consistent with the reference. The wavelet-based spectral analysis indicates that the energy distribution associated with the rain/no rain variability throughout spatial and temporal scales in satellite products agrees well with radar-based precipitation fields. The wavelet coefficients characterizing very finescale variations (finer than 40 km and 2 h) of satellite and ground radar masks are poorly correlated. Coarse spatial and temporal scales are essentially responsible for the agreement between satellite and radar masks. Consequently, the spectral energy of the difference between the two masks is concentrated in fine scales. Satellite-derived multiyear mean diurnal cycles of rain occurrence are in good agreement with gauge data in Benin and Niger. Spectral analysis and diurnal cycle computation are also performed in the West Africa region using the TRMM Precipitation Radar. The results at the regional scale are consistent with the results obtained over the ground radar and gauge sites.
Plan de classement
Hydrologie [062] ; Télédétection [126]
Description Géographique
BENIN ; NIGER ; BURKINA FASO
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010067741] ; Niamey (LASDEL)
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010067741
Contact