scholarly journals How well do multi-satellite products capture the space-time dynamics of precipitation? Part I: five products assessed via a wavenumber-frequency decomposition

Author(s):  
Clement Guilloteau ◽  
Efi Foufoula-Georgiou ◽  
Pierre Kirstetter ◽  
Jackson Tan ◽  
George J. Huffman

AbstractAs more global satellite-derived precipitation products become available, it is imperative to evaluate them more carefully for providing guidance as to how well precipitation space-time features are captured for use in hydrologic modeling, climate studies and other applications. Here we propose a space-time Fourier spectral analysis and define a suite of metrics which evaluate the spatial organization of storm systems, the propagation speed and direction of precipitation features, and the space-time scales at which a satellite product reproduces the variability of a reference “ground-truth” product (“effective resolution”). We demonstrate how the methodology relates to our physical intuition using the case study of a storm system with rich space-time structure. We then evaluate five high-resolution multi-satellite products (CMORPH, GSMaP, IMERG-early, IMERG-final and PERSIANN-CCS) over a period of two years over the southeastern US. All five satellite products show generally consistent space-time power spectral density when compared to a reference ground gauge-radar dataset (GV-MRMS), revealing agreement in terms of average morphology and dynamics of precipitation systems. However, a deficit of spectral power at wavelengths shorter than 200 km and periods shorter than 4 h reveals that all satellite products are excessively “smooth”. The products also show low levels of spectral coherence with the gauge-radar reference at these fine scales, revealing discrepancies in capturing the location and timing of precipitation features. From the space-time spectral coherence, the IMERG-final product shows superior ability in resolving the space-time dynamics of precipitation down to 200 km and 4 h scales compared to the other products.

2016 ◽  
pp. 4014-4017
Author(s):  
Michael A Persinger

                The value for the Lorentz contraction to produce a discrepancy for a hypothetical number that reflects a property (21.3π4) of sub-matter space was calculated. When applied to time the contraction would be ~35 min. The difference in mass-equivalent energy for an electron at c (the velocity of light in a vacuum) and the required v was ~2 ·10-20 J which has emerged as a significant quantity that may permeate from the force at Planck’s Length when applied across the wavelength of the neutral hydrogen line. Two separate types of photomultiplier instruments (digital and analogue) measuring with different sampling rates for background photon quantities over 50 randomly selected days demonstrated averaged conspicuous inflections of standardized spectral power densities around 35 min. This is the same basic interval where microvariations in the value of the gravitational constant (G) approached a limit at which white noise dominated.  The possibility is considered that this value for temporal inflections in photon power spectral densities may reflect the intrinsic nature of space-time contractions that relate gravity and photons.


1999 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 337-342 ◽  
Author(s):  
Markus Bär ◽  
Rainer Hegger ◽  
Holger Kantz

2016 ◽  
Vol 587 ◽  
pp. A156 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Dirkx ◽  
R. Noomen ◽  
P. N. A. M. Visser ◽  
L. I. Gurvits ◽  
L. L. A. Vermeersen

2006 ◽  
Vol 16 (08) ◽  
pp. 2333-2349 ◽  
Author(s):  
SERGEY SKACHEK ◽  
ANDREW ADAMATZKY ◽  
CHRIS MELHUISH

We study how to employ space-time dynamics in nonlinear media to achieve distributed manipulation of objects — positioning, orienting and transporting objects by wave-fronts and patterns in excitable medium. We present the results of computational experiments of a massive parallel actuator controlled by a cellular-automaton model of an excitable medium. The model incorporates closed-loop actuation where sites of the medium can be excited not only by their closest neighbors but also by the edges of the manipulated object. We analyze motion of basic planar shapes (either initially aligned along axes or randomly oriented) induced by an actuator controlled by excitable lattice with various excitation rules. We demonstrate that space-time excitation dynamics in discrete nonlinear media bears a huge potential in terms of sensible nontrivial manipulation of planar shapes.


2020 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 2823-2825 ◽  
Author(s):  
Faye L. Jackson ◽  
Robert J. Fryer ◽  
David M. Hannah ◽  
Iain A. Malcolm

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