Group photo of attendees of the 2024 PMM Science Team Meeting, standing in front of a boat.
Above image: Attendees of the 2024 PMM Science Team Meeting.

IMERG V07 Early and Late Run Extreme Values in October 2024

Regions of unrealistically high values appeared in the IMERG Early and Late files starting around 00:00 UTC on 17 October 2024. Upon investigation, GPM scientists detected an operational problem on the GPM Core Observatory around 15 October 2024 that caused some corrupted CORRA data to be added to the CORRA-GMI calibration accumulator files for the IMERG Early and Late Runs. These anomalous data affected the calibration when it was next updated (on 17 October 2024). Repaired calibration files were applied at 06:00 UTC on 2 November 2024. The time spans of the unrealistic calibrations in Early
top image for Sahara 2024
Most people live in places where it rains much more often than it does in the Sahara Desert. For this reason, it can be challenging to make sense of news reports of major storms in the Sahara. NASA satellite data and rainfall statistics can give the needed context. Below is a discussion of three news stories about rainfall in or near the Sahara Desert during August and September 2024. These news stories described storm runoff, infrastructure damage, and the rain's impact on the ecosystems at the edge of the desert. Areas with significant impacts are shown in green in Figure 1. Figure 1. A map
Screenshot of IMERG rain rates on October 29, 2024
During the 10-day period from Oct. 26 through Nov. 4, 2024, parts of central-eastern and southern Spain saw unusually heavy flooding that resulted in heavy infrastructure damage and over 200 fatalities, according to the Associated Press. In this animation, NASA’s IMERG multi-satellite data product shows estimated rain rates (blue/yellow shading) and accumulations (green/purple shading) from the flooding rainfall. Cloudiness is also shown in white/gray shading, from geosynchronous infrared satellite observations. Download video (right-click -> "Save As") The flooding was caused by heavy
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For the third consecutive year, NASA’s Global Precipitation Measurement Mission applications team and University of Coimbra’s Earth and Space Science Center (CITEUC Portugal) collaborated to host the GPM Mentorship Program. The 2024 initiative built on previous years' successes, supporting new and existing user communities and providing a tailored hands-on learning experience in using GPM data for applications. It gave participants an overview of state-of-the-art GPM satellite-based precipitation estimates and provided users with examples of applying GPM data to support real-world problems