Rainfall


Book Description

Published by the American Geophysical Union as part of the Geophysical Monograph Series, Volume 191. Rainfall: State of the Science offers the most up-to-date knowledge on the fundamental and practical aspects of rainfall. Each chapter, self-contained and written by prominent scientists in their respective fields, provides three forms of information: fundamental principles, detailed overview of current knowledge and description of existing methods, and emerging techniques and future research directions. The book discusses Rainfall microphysics: raindrop morphodynamics, interactions, size distribution, and evolution Rainfall measurement and estimation: ground-based direct measurement (disdrometer and rain gauge), weather radar rainfall estimation, polarimetric radar rainfall estimation, and satellite rainfall estimation Statistical analyses: intensity-duration-frequency curves, frequency analysis of extreme events, spatial analyses, simulation and disaggregation, ensemble approach for radar rainfall uncertainty, and uncertainty analysis of satellite rainfall products The book is tailored to be an indispensable reference for researchers, practitioners, and graduate students who study any aspect of rainfall or utilize rainfall information in various science and engineering disciplines.




Atmospheric Electric Measurement Results at Mauna Loa Observatory


Book Description

This report presents a reproducible data set of the atmospheric electric variables which is interpretable as a reference standard, i.e., an "atmospheric benchmark," of the suspended particulate mater within the earth's air envelope. To this purpose there follows, in reduced and tabulated form, the simultaneous hourly values of the atmospheric electric variables together with concurrent meteorological observations recorded at the Mauna Loa high altitude observatory on the island of Hawaii during the period from September 1, 1960 through August 31, 1961. Mean hourly data summaries for monthly, seasonal, and annual periods are presented in tabular and graphical form and the observational procedure and details of instrumentation are described.







Technical Paper


Book Description




Maximum 24-hour Precipitation in the United States


Book Description

The data and limited to records from United States Weather Bureau first-order, cooperative, and special stations, and from stations maintained by other agencies and private companies that were published in Climatological Data and the Hydrologic Bulletin.