Authors
Fraser King, Claire Pettersen, Larry F Bliven, Diego Cerrai, Alexey Chibisov, Steven J Cooper, Tristan L’Ecuyer, Mark S Kulie, Matti Leskinen, Marian Mateling, Lynn McMurdie, Dimitri Moisseev, Stephen W Nesbitt, Walter A Petersen, Peter Rodriguez, Carl Schirtzinger, Martin Stuefer, Annakaisa von Lerber, Matthew T Wingo, David B Wolff, Telyana Wong, Norman Wood
Publication date
2024/5
Journal
Earth and Space Science
Volume
11
Issue
5
Pages
e2024EA003538
Description
Microphysical observations of precipitating particles are critical data sources for numerical weather prediction models and remote sensing retrieval algorithms. However, obtaining coherent data sets of particle microphysics is challenging as they are often unindexed, distributed across disparate institutions, and have not undergone a uniform quality control process. This work introduces a unified, comprehensive Northern Hemisphere particle microphysical data set from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration precipitation imaging package (PIP), accessible in a standardized data format and stored in a centralized, public repository. Data is collected from 10 measurement sites spanning 34° latitude (37°N–71°N) over 10 years (2014–2023), which comprise a set of 1,070,000 precipitating minutes. The provided data set includes measurements of a suite of microphysical attributes for both rain and snow …
Scholar articles
F King, C Pettersen, LF Bliven, D Cerrai, A Chibisov… - Earth and Space Science, 2024