Passive Microwave Signatures and Retrieval of High-Latitude Snowfall Over Open Oceans and Sea Ice: Insights From Coincidences of GPM and CloudSat Satellites

Submitted by LisaN on
Publication Year
Authors
Vahedizade, S., A. Ebtehaj, Y. You, S. E. Ringerud, and F. J. Turk
Journal
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
DOI
10.1109/TGRS.2021.3071709
Mission Affiliation
Major Category

Assimilation of DAWN Doppler wind lidar data during the 2017 Convective Processes Experiment (CPEX): impact on precipitation and flow structure

Submitted by LisaN on
Publication Year
Authors
Hristova-Veleva, S., S. Zhang, F. J. Turk, Z. S. Haddad, and R. Sawaya
Journal
Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Volume
14(5)
Page Numbers
3333–3350
DOI
10.5194/amt-14-3333-2021
Mission Affiliation
Major Category

Adapting Passive Microwave-Based Precipitation Algorithms to Variable Microwave Land Surface Emissivity to Improve Precipitation Estimation from the GPM Constellation

Submitted by LisaN on
Publication Year
Authors
Turk, F. J., S. E. Ringerud, Y. You, A. Camplani, D. Casella, G. Panegrossi, P. Sano, A. Ebtehaj, C. Guilloteau, N. Utsumi, C. Prigent, and C. Peters-Lidard
Journal
J. Hydrometeor.
Volume
22(7)
Page Numbers
1755-1781
DOI
10.1175/JHM-D-20-0296.1
Mission Affiliation
Major Category

Applications of a CloudSat-TRMM and CloudSat-GPM Satellite Coincidence Dataset

Submitted by LisaN on
Publication Year
Authors
Turk, F. J., S. E. Ringerud, A. Camplani, D. Casella, R. J. Chase, A. Ebtehaj, J. Gong, M. Kulie, G. Liu, L. Milani, G. Panegrossi, R. Padullés, J.-F. Rysman, P. Sanò, S. Vahedizade, and N. Wood
Journal
Remote Sens.
Volume
13(12)
Page Numbers
2264
DOI
10.3390/rs13122264
Mission Affiliation
Major Category
Arizona GPM DPR Convective Storm 3D View 2021 July 15
There is a monsoon that occurs in the southwestern U.S. each summer, and it brought heavy rain to the deserts of Arizona this week. This monsoon is less well known than India's Summer Monsoon, but both monsoons have similar causes [1, 2, 3]. In western Mexico and the southern edge of the southwest U.S., most of the year's rain typically falls in just three months: June, July, and August. The region is shown in light blue in the below climate map, which shows where summer rainfall predominates (Figure 1). This seasonal pattern is known as the North American Monsoon. The map was generated using