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TRMM Product Level 2B Combined (PR, TMI) Rainfall Profile

Data Access for

2B31: http://disc.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/data/datapool/TRMM_DP/01_Data_Products/01_Orbital/09_Combined_2B_31/

Contents:

[Skip Contents]
Summary 
TRMM Satellite Operating Altitude Change 
Sponsor and Acknowledgement 
Future Updates 
Data Flow Description 
Data Set Description 
Tools for Visualizing Data
Sample Software
Data Access 
Points of Contact 
References 
 

Summary

This document provides basic information on 2B31, Combined (PR, TMI) Rainfall Profile Product.

The TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI) is a nine-channel passive microwave radiometer, which builds on the heritage of the Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I) instrument flown aboard the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) platforms.

The TRMM Precipitation Radar (PR), the first of its kind in space, is an electronically scanning radar, operating at 13.8 GHz that measures the 3-D rainfall distribution over both land and ocean, and defines the layer depth of the precipitation.

The TRMM combined algorithm (2B31) combines data from the TMI and PR to produce the best rain estimate for TRMM. Currently, it uses the low frequency channels of TMI to find the total path attenuation. This information is used to constrain the radar equation.

TRMM Satellite Operating Altitude Change

The average operating altitude for TRMM was changed from 350 to 403 km during the period of August 7-24, 2001. This orbit boost maneuver extended the mission life significantly. All post-boost data products had been released by the TRMM Science Project, as of early December 2001. All TRMM data products (post- and pre-boost) are available via the TRMM data search-and-order system at http://disc.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/data/datapool/TRMM_DP/. The time period before August 7, 2001 is referred to as pre-boost, and the time period after August 24, 2001 is referred to as post-boost.

The characteristics of the three rain instruments for pre- and post-boost are shown in following table:

Characteristics of TRMM Instruments
  Swath Width (km) Ground Resolution (km)
Pre-boost Post-boost Pre-boost Post-boost
VIRS 720 833 2.2 2.4
TMI 760 878   4.4*   5.1*
PR 215 247 4.3 5.0
* Ground resolutions of TMI are those at 85.5 GHz (highest resolution).


The pre- and post-boost characteristics of TRMM data are different; their details are listed in the Data Characteristics table for each orbital product. Some caveats associated with post-boost TRMM Precipitation Radar (PR) products have been released by the PR algorithm scientists and are available at ftp://disc2.nascom.nasa.gov/data/TRMM/Documentation/TRMM_Boost_PR_Caveats.html.

For TRMM version 5 products, the post-boost filenames all have a "5A" in the product version part of the name, compared with a "5" in pre-boost filenames. For version 6, the filenames have no differences for pre-boost and post-boost.

Sponsor and Acknowledgement

The distribution of this data set is funded by NASA's Earth Science Enterprise (ESE). The data are not copyrighted; however, we request that when you publish data or results using these data, please acknowledge as follows: The data used in this study were acquired as part of the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM). The algorithms were developed by the TRMM Science Team. The data were processed by the TRMM Science Data and Information System (TSDIS) and the TRMM Office; they are archived and distributed by the Goddard Distributed Active Archive Center. TRMM is an international project jointly sponsored by the Japan National Space Development Agency (NASDA) and the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Office of Earth Sciences. Please send a copy of your publication to Help Desk, Goddard DAAC, Code 610.2, NASA GSFC, Greenbelt, MD 20771 or email the reference of your publication to help-disc@listserv.gsfc.nasa.gov.

Future Updates

It is expected that some of the TRMM algorithms will be refined or improved as new measurements are gathered and analyzed by the TRMM Science Team. The data products are expected to be periodically reprocessed by TSDIS in order to provide the scientific and other user communities with the most current and best available rainfall products. The exact reprocessing schedule will be set by a team designated by the TRMM Project Scientist. This document will be updated in coordination with the TRMM reprocessing schedule and whenever appropriate as determined by the Goddard DAAC Hydrology Data Support Team.

Data Flow Description

PR Level 1A ==> 1B11 TMI Calibrated Brightness Temperature and 1C21 PR Reflectivities 1C21 ==> 2B31 Combined (PR, TMI) Rainfall Profile

The data flow of all products are shown in Satellite Algorithm Flow Diagram.

Data Set Description

Data Characteristics

TRMM 2B31 Data Characteristics
  Pre-boost (before 2001-08-07) Post-boost (after 2001-0 8-24)
Temporal Coverage Start Date: 1997-12-08
Stop Date: 2001-08-07
Start Date: 2001-08-24
Stop Date: -
Geographic Coverage Latitude: 38°S - 38°N
Longitude:180°W - 180°E
Latitude: 38°S - 38°N
Longitude:180°W - 180°E
Temporal Resolution About 91.5 minutes per orbit
About 16 orbits per day
More information about revisit frequency
About 92.5 minutes per orbit
About 16 orbits per day
More information about revisit frequency
Horizontal Resolution 4.3 km 5.0 km
Scan Characteristics Swath Width: 215 km
Rays/Scan: nray = 49
Scans/Second (SS): 1/0.6
Seconds/Orbit (SO): 5490
Average Scans/Orbit: nscan = SS*SO = 9150
Swath Width: 247 km
Rays/Scan: nray = 49
Scans/Second (SS): 1/0.6
Seconds/Orbit (SO): 5550
Average Scans/Orbit: nscan = SS*SO = 9250
Average File Size Compressed: ~8.2 MB
Original: ~158 MB
Compressed: ~8.5 MB
Original: ~160 MB
File Type HDF HDF

Data Format Structure

Further information on the contents and structure of the 2B31 product can be found in Volume 4 of the "File Specifications for TSDIS Products - Level 2 and Level3" .

Data Format Structure for 2B31, Combined (PR, TMI) Rainfall Profile
Name Type Record
Size
(byte)
Dim Size/
# of Records
Scaled
by
Range Unit Description
ECS Core Metadata Char Attribute 10,000  - - - - ECS Core Metadata.
PS Metadata Char Attribute 10,000  - - - - Product Specific Metadata.
Swath Structure Char Attribute 5,000  - - - - Specification of the swath geometry.
Scan Time Vdata Table nscan - - - Time associated with the scan, expressed as 8-byte float UTC second of the day.
Geolocation Float SDS 2*nray*nscan - - degree Geolocation is the earth location of the center of the IFOV at the altitude of the earth ellipsoid.
Scan Status Vdata Table 15  nscan - - - Status of each scan.
Navigation Vdata Table 88  nscan - - - Spacecraft geocentric information.
D-hat Integer SDS nray*nscan 100 0.7 ~ 1.8 mm* Correlation-corrected mass-weighted mean drop diameter. ( more )
Sigma-D-hat Integer SDS nray*nscan 100 0.00 ~ 2.00 mm* RMS uncertainty in D-Hat. The accuracy is 0.01 "normalized" mm.
R-hat Integer SDS Nradarrange*nray*nscan 10 0.0 ~ 500.0 mm/hr Instantaneous rain rate at the radar range gates. The accuracy is 0.1 mm/hr.
Sigma-R-hat Integer SDS Nradarrange*nray*nscan 10 -125 ~ 125 mm/hr RMS uncertainty in the R-hat estimated at the radar range gates. (The negative sign indicating estimates based on a "rain-possible" detection by the radar rather than the "rain-certain" associated with positive values). The values -125 and 125 are reserved for cases where the RMS uncertainty could not be accurately estimated. The accuracy is 0.5 mm/hr.
RR-Surf Float SDS nray*nscan - 0.0 ~ 500.0 mm/hr Surface rain rate.
Sigma-RR-Surf Integer SDS nray*nscan 100 -125 ~ 125 mm/hr RMS uncertainty in RR-Surf. (The negative sign indicating estimates based on a "rain-possible" detection by the radar rather than the "rain-certain" associated with positive values). The values -125 and 125 are reserved for cases where the RMS uncertainty could not be accurately estimated. The accuracy is 0.5 mm/hr.
latentHeadHH Float SDS nlayer*nray*nscan - - °K/hr The "hydrometeor heating" calculated from the vertical fluxes of the different hydrometeor species and using average archival temperature/ pressure/humidity soundings which depend on longitude and latitude only. In V6 all the precipitation is assumed to be liquid. Heating is listed for 13 layers.
spare Float SDS 4*nray*nscan - - - Contents and ranges are not public.

* "normalized units" are defined as follows:
If a variable X, expressed in grams, is correlated with the rain rate R and a variable Y is defined where Y = X * R0.37 R, then the unit of Y is called "normalized grams".

Nradarrange:
The number of radar range gates, up to about 20 km from the earth ellipsoid (80). The gates range from gate 0 to gate 79. Each gate is 250 m apart, with gate 79 at the earth ellipsoid.

Tools for Visualizing Data

The Goddard DAAC provides the following tools to help users visualize data in the Hierarchical Data Format (HDF).

TSDIS Orbit Viewer

The TSDIS Orbit Viewer is a menu-driven graphical interface for dynamically generating images from TRMM HDF files. The viewer can display, at the full instrument resolution, TRMM satellite, Ground Validation, browse, and Coincidence Subsetted Intermediate (CSI) products, as well as other derived products.

The software runs on Microsoft Windows and UNIX.

The source code and installation instructions for the Orbit Viewer are available from the Goddard DAAC's TRMM ftp site (ftp://disc2.nascom.nasa.gov/software/trmm_software/Orbit_Viewer).

Please note: TSDIS can provide technical support for the Orbit Viewer only to certain members of the TRMM Science Team. Other users should contact the DAAC's Hydrology Data Support Team (hydrology-disc@listserv.gsfc.nasa.gov).

EOSView

EOSView is a standalone X-based data visualization tool that displays HDF files. It can be used to view data ordered from the Goddard DAAC. In addition, it provides a secondary mechanism for previewing browse files before ordering data. (The primary mechanism is the preview feature of the TRMM Data Search and Order System.) EOSView serves as a file verification tool. The contents of HDF files are displayed and individual objects can be selected for display. Displayable objects include raster images, data sets in tables, pseudocolor images of data sets, attributes, and annotations. Simple animations can be performed for a file with multiple raster images.

A unique interface has been provided for handling HDF-EOS data structures. The Swath/Point/Grid interface uses only HDF-EOS library calls. EOSView users will not see the underlying HDF structures but will be prompted for what parts of the HDF-EOS object they wish to view. The EOSView requires at least 4 megabytes of memory and a larger than 24-bit graphics board.


Download Instructions for the Software:

These tools can be downloaded via anonymous ftp using a command line ftp client, available on all Unix machines.

The source code, installation instructions, and documentation for EOSView and Orbit Viewer are available from the Goddard DAAC's TRMM ftp site (ftp://disc2.nascom.nasa.gov/software/trmm_software).

The following files should be downloaded for EOSView:

  • EOSView (executable)
  • eosview.csc (help)
  • eosview.uid (user interface description file)
  • eosview.dat (IDL commands file)


How to start EOSView:

Start EOSView by typing 'EOSView' at the command prompt. The current working directory must contain the four EOSView files.

Sample Software

TRMM HDF Data File Read Software

The Goddard DAAC Hydrology Team has developed the TRMM HDF Data File Read Software, first released in February 1999. The software reads TRMM HDF data files and writes out to flat binary files. The software has been tested with most of the TRMM standard products, as well as with some derived subset products. Both C and Fortran versions are available from ftp://disc2.nascom.nasa.gov/software/trmm_software/Read_HDF/.

TSDIS Toolkit

TSDIS developed the TSDIS Science Algorithm Toolkit to assist the TRMM Science Team's algorithm developers. The toolkit provides a library of commonly used routines, constants, and macros. It also allows seamless integration of TRMM algorithms into the TSDIS environment.

The toolkit provides routines for reading and writing data to and from the HDF files; routines are provided for Levels 1-3 products and for both satellite and GV. Each of the routines in the toolkit are callable in either C or Fortran. The toolkit also includes routines for reading land/sea data and topographical data.

Data Access Information

The Goddard DAAC maintains archives of all TRMM data products and many other Hydrology data sets. The archived data can be ordered via FTP network transfer.

Data Volume Limits By Media
CDR FTP-Pull
Min. Max. Min. Max. Min. Max. Min. Max.
0 GB 3.17 GB 0 GB 2 GB 1 GB 50 GB 1 GB 50 GB
TRMM 2B31 can be accessed and ordered using the Goddard DAAC's TRMM Data Search and Order System at http://disc.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov/data/datapool/TRMM_DP/01_Data_Products/01_Orbital/09_Combined_2B_31/.

Points of Contact

For information about or assistance in using any Goddard DAAC data, contact the DAAC Help Desk at:

GES Distributed Active Archive Center (DAAC)
Code 610.2
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt, Maryland 20771

Email: help-disc@listserv.gsfc.nasa.gov.
301-614-5224 (voice)
301-614-5268 (fax)

References

Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission Science Data and Information System (TSDIS) Interface Control Specification Between the TSDIS and the TSDIS Science User (TSU)
Volume 3: File Specifications for TRMM Products - Level 1.
Volume 4: File Specifications for TRMM Products - Level 2 and Level 3.

Appendix

TRMM 2B31 Geolocation
Geolocation is the earth location of the center of the IFOV at the altitude of the earth ellipsoid. The first dimension is latitude and longitude, in that order. The next dimensions are numbers of pixels and scans. Values are represented as floating point decimal degrees. Off-earth is represented as -9999.9. Latitude is positive north, negative south. Longitude is positive east, negative west. A point on the 180° meridian is assigned to the western hemisphere.

TRMM 2B31 D-hat Description
D-hat is the correlation-corrected mass-weighted mean drop diameter. The accuracy is 0.01 "normalized" mm (the value 0 indicates no rain or bad data). The average value of dHat is around 1.1 "normalized" mm, a unit which comes from the fact that dHat is related to the true mass-weighted mean drop diameter D* mm by the formula dHat = D*rHat-0.155 (with rHat in mm/hr).
Layers and upper and lower boundaries
in km above the earth ellipsoid
used in calculating Latent Heat
Layers Upper Boundary Lower Boundary
  1 18 16
  2 16 14
  3 14 12
  4 12 10
  5 10   8
  6   8   7
  7   7   6
  8   6   5
  9   5   4
10   4   3
11   3   2
12   2   1
13   1   0
 
TRMM Navigation
Name Format Description
Spacecraft Geocentric
Position [3]
3 X 4-byte float The position (m) of the spacecraft in Geocentric Inertial Coordinates at the Scan mid-Time (i.e., time at the middle pixel/IFOV of the active scan period). The order of components is: x, y, and z. Geocentric Inertial Coordinates are also commonly known as Earth Centered Inertial coordinates. These coordinates will be True of Date (rather than Epoch 2000 which are also commonly used), as interpolated from the data in the Flight Dynamics Facility ephemeris files generated for TRMM.
Spacecraft Geocentric
Velocity [3]
3 X 4-byte float The velocity (ms -1) of the spacecraft in Geocentric Inertial Coordinates at the Scan mid-Time. The order of components is: x, y, and z.
Spacecraft Geodetic
Latitude
4-byte float The geodetic latitude (decimal degrees) of the spacecraft at the Scan mid-Time.
Spacecraft Geodetic
Longitude
4-byte float The geodetic longitude (decimal degrees) of the spacecraft at the Scan mid-Time. Range is -180 to 179.999999.
Spacecraft Geodetic
Altitude
4-byte float The altitude (m) of the spacecraft above the Earth Ellipsoid at the Scan mid-Time.
Spacecraft
Attitude [3]
3 X 4-byte float The satellite attitude Euler angles at the Scan mid-Time. The order of the components in the file is roll, pitch, and yaw. However, the angles are computed using a 3-2-1 Euler rotation sequence representing the rotation order yaw, pitch, and roll for the rotation from Orbital Coordinates to the spacecraft body coordinates. Orbital Coordinates represent an orthogonal triad in Geocentric Inertial Coordinates where the Z-axis is toward the geocentric nadir, the Y-axis is perpendicular to the spacecraft velocity opposite the orbit normal direction, and the X-axis is approximately in the velocity direction for a near circular orbit.
Note this is geocentric, not geodetic, referenced, so that pitch and roll will have twice orbital frequency components due to the onboard control system following the oblate geodetic Earth horizon. Note also that the yaw value will show an orbital frequency component relative to the Earth fixed ground track due to the Earth rotation relative to inertial coordinates.
Sensor Orientation
Matrix [3 X 3]
3 X 3 X 4-byte float The rotation matrix from the instrument coordinate frame to Geocentric Inertial Coordinates at the Scan mid-Time.
Greenwich
Hour Angle
4-byte float The rotation angle (degrees) from Geocentric Inertial Coordinates to Earth Fixed Coordinates.
 
TRMM PR Scan Status
Name Format Values Description
Missing 1-byte integer Value and meaning Indicates whether information is contained in the scan.
Validity 1-byte integer Bit and meaning A summary of status modes.
QAC 1-byte integer 0: No decoding error occurred. The Quality and Accounting Capsule of the Science packet as it appears in Level-0 data.
Geolocation
Quality
1-byte integer Bit and Meaning A summary of geolocation quality in the scan.
Data Quality 1-byte integer Bit and Meaning A summary of data quality in the scan.
Current Spacecraft
Orientation
1-byte integer Value and Meaning Current spacecraft orientation.
Current ACS Mode 1-byte integer Value and Meaning Current ACS mode.
Yaw Update Status 1-byte integer 0: Inaccurate
1: Indeterminate
2: Accurate
Yaw update status.
PR Mode 1-byte integer 1: Observation Mode
2: Other Mode
PR mode.
PR Status 1 1-byte integer 0: Normal
1: A little questionable
A warning for scan data.
This field is used only for NASDA's data analysis.
PR Status 2 1-byte integer 0: Not initialized
1: Initialized
Initialization in Onboard Surface Algorithm.
Fractional
Orbital Number
4-byte float   The orbit number and fractional part of the orbit at Scan Time.
The orbit fraction part is calculated as:
(Time-Orbit Start Time)/(Orbit End Time-Orbit Start Time)

Value and Meaning of Missing
Value Meaning
0 Scan data elements contains information
1 Scan was missing in the telemetry data
2 Scan data contains no elements with rain

Bit and Meaning of Validity
Bit Meaning if bit=1
0 Spare (always 0)
1 Non routine spacecraft orientation (2 or 3)
2 Non routine ACS mode (other than 4)
3 Non routine yaw update status (0 or 1)
4 Non routine instrument status (other than 1)
5 Non routine QAC (non-zero)
6 Spare (always 0)
7 Spare (always 0)

Bit and Meaning of Geolocation Quality
Bit Meaning if bit=1 for Non-routine Situation Routine Situation
0 Latitude limit error If all status modes are routine, all bits in
Validity = 0. Routine means that scan data has
been measured in the normal operational situation
as far as the status modes are concerned. Validity
does not assess data or geolocation quality. Validity
is broken into 8 bit flags. Each bit=0 if the status
is routine but the bit = 1 if the status is not routine.
Bit 0 is the least significant bit (i.e., if bit i=1 and
other bits = 0, the unsigned integer value is 2**i).
1 Geolocation discontinuity
2 Attitude change rate limit error
3 Attitude limit error
4 Satellite undergoing maneuvers
5 Using predictive orbit data
6 Geolocation calculation error
7 not used

Bit and Meaning of Data Quality
Bit Meaning if bit=1 Note
0 Missing Unless this is 0 (normal), the scan data is
meaningless to higher processing. Bit 0 is the
least significant bit (i.e., if bit i=1 and other
bit = 0, the unsigned integer value is 2**i).
5 Geolocation quality is not normal
6 Validity is not normal

Value and Meaning of
Current Spacecraft Orientation
Value Meaning
0 +x forward
1 -x forward
2 -y forward
3 Inertial -- CERES Calibration
4 Unknown Orientation

Value and Meaning of
Current ACS Mode
Value Meaning
0 Standby
1 Sun Acquire
2 Earth Acquire
3 Yaw Acquire
4 Nominal
5 Yaw Maneuver
6 Delta-H (Thruster)
7 Delta-V (Thruster)
8 CERES Calibration
 
TRMM Frequency Analysis Result*
(Number of visits for a 30-day period)
Radar Site Latitude (°) PR (~215 km) VIRS (~720 km) TMI (~760 km)
Kwajalein Atoll 8.72 9 29 31
Darwin, Australia -12.45 10 31 32
Guam 13.50 9 32 32
Om Koi, Thailand 17.80 9 31 33
Kauai, HI 22.17 13 36 38
Sao Paolo, Brazil -23.58 12 41 42
Taiwan 23.92 11 40 42
Key West, FL 24.67 13 41 42
Miami, FL 25.75 13 45 45
Brownsville, TX 25.97 13 43 47
Corpus Christi, TX 27.85 15 49 51
Tampa, FL 28.03 13 51 52
Melbourne, FL 28.10 15 49 53
San Antonio, TX 29.53 16 57 59
Jacksonville, FL 30.33 19 63 65
Texas A&M, TX 30.58 18 67 68
Jerusalem, Israel 31.87 20 92 102
PR:      Precipitation Radar
VIRS: Visible/InfraRed Scanner
TMI:   TRMM Microwave Imager

* This analysis result was derived based on TRMM pre-boost orbital information.
The revisit frequency should be slightly higher after TRMM boost (August 24, 2001).

If you have questions regarding this table, please send email to:
helpdesk@tsdis02.nascom.nasa.gov.



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  • Last updated: April 10, 2008 19:16:40 GMT