This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are agreeing to our use of cookies. 

Dataset

 

Global Precipitation Measurements (GPM) Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals (IMERG) L3 half-hourly 0.1 degree x 0.1 degree v7

Update Frequency: Unknown
Status: Ongoing
Online Status: ONLINE
Publication State: Published
Publication Date: 2024-10-14
Download Stats: last 12 months
Dataset Size: 514.09K Files | 2TB

Abstract

This dataset contains Global Precipitation Measurements (GPM) Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals (IMERG) v7. NASA’s Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) algorithm combines information from the GPM satellite constellation to estimate precipitation over most of the Earth's surface. IMERG is particularly valuable over areas of Earth's surface that lack ground-based precipitation-measuring instruments, including oceans and remote areas.

IMERG fuses precipitation estimates collected during the TRMM satellite’s operation (2000 - 2015) with recent precipitation estimates collected by the GPM mission (2014 - present) creating a continuous precipitation dataset spanning over two decades. This extended record allows scientists to compare past and present precipitation trends, enabling more accurate climate and weather models and a better understanding of Earth’s water cycle and extreme precipitation events. IMERG is available in near real-time with estimates of Earth’s precipitation updated every half-hour, enabling a wide range of applications to help communities around the world make informed decisions for disasters, disease, resource management, energy production, food security, and more.

The precipitation estimates from the various precipitation-relevant satellite passive microwave (PMW) sensors comprising the GPM constellation are computed using the 2017 version of the Goddard Profiling Algorithm (GPROF2017), then gridded, intercalibrated to the GPM Combined Ku Radar-Radiometer Algorithm (CORRA) product, and merged into half-hourly 0.1°x0.1° (roughly 10x10 km) fields. Level 3 data are averaged global gridded products, screened for bad data points

The Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission is an international network of satellites that provide the next-generation global observations of rain and snow.

Citable as:  National Aeronautics and Space Administration (2024): Global Precipitation Measurements (GPM) Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals (IMERG) L3 half-hourly 0.1 degree x 0.1 degree v7. National Aeronautics and Space Administration, date of citation. https://catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/uuid/6ae3dc8d92444b2bb954173fe98559b6/
Abbreviation: Not defined
Keywords: GPM, IMERG, precipitation, global, retrievals

Details

Previous Info:
No news update for this record
Previously used record identifiers:
No related previous identifiers.
Access rules:
Public data: access to these data is available to both registered and non-registered users.
Use of these data is covered by the following licence(s):
https://gpm.nasa.gov/data/policy
When using these data you must cite them correctly using the citation given on the CEDA Data Catalogue record.
Data lineage:

Data taken as is from National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). https://gpm1.gesdisc.eosdis.nasa.gov/data/GPM_L3/GPM_3IMERGHH.07/

Data Quality:
Data are as given by the data provider, no quality control has been performed by the Centre for Environmental Data Analysis (CEDA)
File Format:
Data are HDF5 formatted.

Process overview

This dataset was generated by the computation detailed below.
Title

Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) v7

Abstract

The precipitation estimates from the various precipitation-relevant satellite passive microwave (PMW) sensors comprising the GPM constellation are computed using the 2017 version of the Goddard Profiling Algorithm (GPROF2017), then gridded, intercalibrated to the GPM Combined Ku Radar-Radiometer Algorithm (CORRA) product, and merged into half-hourly 0.1°x0.1° (roughly 10x10 km) fields.

Version 07B is the current version of the IMERG data sets. Older versions will no longer be available and have been superseded by Version 07. The Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) is the unified U.S. algorithm that provides the multi-satellite precipitation product for the U.S. GPM team. The precipitation estimates from the various precipitation-relevant satellite passive microwave (PMW) sensors comprising the GPM constellation are computed using the 2021 version of the Goddard Profiling Algorithm (GPROF2021), then gridded, intercalibrated to the GPM Combined Ku Radar-Radiometer Algorithm (CORRA) product, and merged into half-hourly 0.1°x0.1° (roughly 10x10 km) fields. Note that CORRA is adjusted to the monthly Global Precipitation Climatology Project (GPCP) Satellite-Gauge (SG) product over high-latitude ocean to correct known biases. The half-hourly intercalibrated merged PMW estimates are then input to both a Morphing-Kalman Filter (KF) Lagrangian time interpolation scheme based on work by the Climate Prediction Center (CPC) and the Precipitation Estimation from Remotely Sensed Information using Artificial Neural Networks (PERSIANN) Dynamic Infrared–Rain Rate (PDIR) re-calibration scheme. In parallel, CPC assembles the zenith-angle-corrected, intercalibrated merged geo-IR fields and forwards them to PPS for input to the PERSIANN-CCS algorithm (supported by an asynchronous re-calibration cycle) which are then input to the KF morphing (quasi-Lagrangian time interpolation) scheme. The KF morphing (supported by an asynchronous KF weights updating cycle) uses the PMW and IR estimates to create half-hourly estimates. Motion vectors for the morphing are computed by maximizing the pattern correlation of successive hours within each of the precipitation (PRECTOT), total precipitable liquid water (TQL), and vertically integrated vapor (TQV) data fields provided by the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications, Version 2 (MERRA-2) and Goddard Earth Observing System model Version 5 (GEOS-5) Forward Processing (FP) for the post-real-time (Final) Run and the near-real-time (Early and Late) Runs, respectively. The vectors from PRECTOT are chosen if available, else from TQL, if available, else from TQV. The KF uses the morphed data as the “forecast” and the IR estimates as the “observations”, with weighting that depends on the time interval(s) away from the microwave overpass time. The IR becomes important after about ±90 minutes away from the overpass time. Variable averaging in the KF is accounted for in a routine (Scheme for Histogram Adjustment with Ranked Precipitation Estimates in the Neighborhood, or SHARPEN) that compares the local histogram of KF morphed precipitation to the local histogram of forward- and backward-morphed microwave data and the IR. The IMERG system is run twice in near-real time: "Early" multi-satellite product ~4 hr after observation time using only forward morphing and "Late" multi-satellite product ~14 hr after observation time, using both forward and backward morphing and once after the monthly gauge analysis is received: "Final", satellite-gauge product ~4 months after the observation month, using both forward and backward morphing and including monthly gauge analyses. In V07, the near-real-time Early and Late half-hourly estimates have a monthly climatological concluding calibration based on averaging the concluding calibrations computed in the Final, while in the post-real-time Final Run the multi-satellite half-hourly estimates are adjusted so that they sum to the Final Run monthly satellite-gauge combination. In all cases the output contains multiple fields that provide information on the input data, selected intermediate fields, and estimation quality. In general, the complete calibrated precipitation, precipitation, is the data field of choice for most users. Briefly describing the Final Run, the input precipitation estimates computed from the various satellite passive microwave sensors are intercalibrated to the CORRA product (because it is presumed to be the best snapshot TRMM/GPM estimate after adjustment to the monthly GPCP SG), then "forward/backward morphed" and combined with microwave precipitation-calibrated geo-IR fields, and adjusted with seasonal GPCP SG surface precipitation data to provide half-hourly and monthly precipitation estimates on a 0.1°x0.1° (roughly 10x10 km) grid over the globe. Precipitation phase is a diagnostic variable computed using analyses of surface temperature, humidity, and pressure. The current period of record is June 2000 to the present (delayed by about 4 months). The Integrated Multi-Satellite Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) algorithm is designed to leverage the international constellation of precipitation-relevant satellites to create a long record of uniformly time/space gridded precipitation estimates for the globe. The algorithm is focused on creating the best estimate at each time step, meaning that it is not a Climate Data Record, although the ideal is as homogenous a record as possible

Input Description

None

Output Description

None

Software Reference

None

No variables found.

Coverage
Temporal Range
Start time:
2000-05-31T23:00:00
End time:
Ongoing
Geographic Extent

 
90.0000°
 
-180.0000°
 
180.0000°
 
-90.0000°