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This collection of resources explores some of the people and organizations using GPM and other NASA Earth data, and how they help improve life around the world.
Date Last Updated
April 30th, 2021
Document Description

To address how NASA data can enable support of operations within the transportation and logistical sectors, the NASA Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Mission Applications Team, in collaboration with the Aerosols, Clouds, Convection and Precipitation (ACCP) Study Applications Impact Team (AIT), organized the virtual 2020 NASA GPM-ACCP Transportation and Logistics Workshop

2021 PMM Science Team Meeting

Dates
Location
Virtual (Microsoft Teams)

The meeting is by invitation to Precipitation Measurement Mission (PMM) Science Team members and specified affiliates.

Due to the Delta variant and rising numbers of COVID cases, as well as the fact that only a relatively small number of team members were expected to attend the meeting in Arizona in person, our science team meeting will switch to a virtual format this year.  
 
The dates will remain the same, Monday, October 18 through Friday, October 22. All times will be Eastern Daylight Savings time. 
 

Mission Affiliation

The Diurnal Cycle of Precipitation according to Multiple Decades of Global Satellite Observations, Three CMIP6 Models, and the ECMWF Reanalysis

Submitted by LisaN on
Publication Year
Authors
Watters, D., A. Battaglia, and R. P. Allan
Journal
J. Climate
Volume
34(12)
Page Numbers
5063-5080
DOI
10.1175/JCLI-D-20-0966.1
Mission Affiliation
Major Category
IMERG Comparison of Typhoon Mindulle and Hurricane Sam
From late Sept. through early Oct. 2021, two powerful storms churned over the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans: Typhoon Mindulle, which peaked as a Category 5 storm, and Hurricane Sam, a Category 4 hurricane and one of the longest-lived hurricane-strength storms on record over the Atlantic Ocean. While neither storm posed a direct threat to land, Mindulle brushed by eastern Japan, leaving heavy rainfall accumulations in the area near Tokyo. Despite the fact that neither storm made landfall, the storms’ slow-motion tracks across warm ocean waters allows an opportunity to observe how the strong winds