Samantha Hartke

and 3 more

In global applications and data sparse regions, which comprise most of the earth, hydrologic model-based flood monitoring relies on precipitation data from satellite multisensor precipitation products or numerical weather forecasts. However, these products often exhibit substantial errors during the meteorological conditions that lead to flooding, including extreme rainfall. The propagation of precipitation forcing errors to predicted runoff and streamflow is scale-dependent and requires an understanding of the autocorrelation structure of precipitation errors, since error autocorrelation impacts the accumulation of precipitation errors over space and time in hydrologic models. Previous efforts to account for satellite precipitation uncertainty in hydrologic models have demonstrated the potential for improving streamflow estimates; however, these efforts use satellite precipitation error models that rely heavily on ground reference data such as rain gages or weather radar and do not characterize the nonstationarity of precipitation error autocorrelation structures. This work evaluates a new method, the Space-Time Rainfall Error and Autocorrelation Model (STREAM), which stochastically generates possible true precipitation fields, as input to the Hillslope Link Model to generate ensemble streamflow estimates. Unlike previous error models, STREAM represents the nonstationary and anisotropic autocorrelation structure of satellite 2 precipitation error and does not use any ground reference to do so. Ensemble streamflow predictions are compared with streamflow generated using satellite precipitation fields as well as a radar-gage precipitation dataset during peak flow events. Results demonstrate that this approach to accounting for precipitation uncertainty effectively characterizes the uncertainty in streamflow estimates and reduces the error of predicted streamflow. Streamflow ensembles forced by STREAM improve streamflow prediction nearly to the level obtained using ground-reference forcing data across basin sizes.

Zhe Li

and 6 more

The usefulness of satellite multisensor precipitation products such as NASA’s 30-minute, 0.1° Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for the Global Precipitation Mission (IMERG) is hindered by their associated errors. Reliable estimates of uncertainty would mitigate this limitation, especially in near-real time. Creating such estimates is challenging, however, due both to the complex discrete-continuous nature of satellite precipitation errors and to the lack of “ground truth” data precisely in the places—including complex terrain and developing countries—that could benefit most from satellite precipitation estimates. In this work, we use swath-based precipitation products from the Global Precipitation Mission (GPM) Dual-frequency Precipitation Radar (DPR) as an alternative to ground-based observations to facilitate IMERG uncertainty estimation. We compare the suitability of two DPR derived products, 2ADPR and 2BCMB, against higher-fidelity Ground Validation Multi-Radar Multi-Sensor (GV-MRMS) ground reference data over the contiguous United States. 2BCMB is selected to train mixed discrete-continuous error models based on Censored Shifted Gamma Distributions. Uncertainty estimates from these error models are compared against alternative models trained on GV-MRMS. Using information from NASA’s Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications, Version 2 (MERRA-2) reanalysis, we also demonstrate how IMERG uncertainty estimates can be further constrained using additional precipitation-related predictors. Though several critical issues remain unresolved, the proposed method shows promise for yielding robust uncertainty estimates in near-real time for IMERG and other similar precipitation products at their native resolution across the entire globe.

Samantha H. Hartke

and 5 more

The usefulness of satellite multi-sensor precipitation (SMP) and other satellite-informed precipitation products in water resources modeling can be hindered by substantial errors which vary considerably with spatiotemporal scale. One approach to cope with these errors is by combining SMPs with ensemble generation methods, such that each ensemble member reflects one plausible realization of the true—but unknown—precipitation. This requires replicating the spatiotemporal autocorrelation structure of SMP errors. The climatology of this structure is unknown for most locations due to a lack of ground reference observations, while the unique anisotropy and nonstationarity within any particular precipitation system limit the relevance of this climataology to the depiction of error in individual storm systems. Characterizing and simulating this autocorrelation across spatiotemporal scales has thus been called a grand challenge within the precipitation community. We introduce the Space-Time Rainfall Error and Autocorrelation Model (STREAM), which combines anisotropic and nonstationary SMP spatiotemporal correlation structures with a pixel-scale precipitation error model to stochastically generate ensemble precipitation fields that resemble “ground truth” precipitation. We generate STREAM precipitation ensembles at high resolution (1-hour, 0.1˚) with minimal reliance on ground-reference data, and evaluate these ensembles at multiple scales. STREAM ensembles consistently “bracket” ground-truth observations and replicate the autocorrelation structure of ground-truth precipitation fields. STREAM is compatible with pixel-scale error/uncertainty formulations beyond those presented here, and could be applied globally to other precipitation sources such as numerical weather predictions or “blended” products. In combination with recent work in SMP uncertainty characterization, STREAM could be run without any ground data.