Litcius/Paper detail

The Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Mission

Gail Skofronick‐Jackson

202052 citationsDOI

Abstract

Water is essential to our planet Earth. Knowing when, where and how precipitation falls is crucial for understanding the linkages between the Earth's water and energy cycles and is extraordinarily important for sustaining life on our planet during climate change. The Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Core Observatory spacecraft launched February 27, 2014, is the anchor to the GPM international satellite mission to unify and advance precipitation measurements from a constellation of research and operational sensors to provide “next-generation” precipitation products. GPM is currently a partnership between NASA and the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA). Status and successes over the past seven years in terms of spacecraft, instruments, retrieval products, validation, and impacts for science and society will be presented.

Topics & Concepts

Global Precipitation MeasurementPrecipitationEnvironmental scienceMeteorologyRemote sensingComputer scienceClimatologyAstrobiologyGeologyGeographyPhysicsPrecipitation Measurement and AnalysisMeteorological Phenomena and SimulationsSoil Moisture and Remote Sensing