GPCP merged monthly climatology precipitation (1979-2011), V2.2

The Global Precipitation Climatology Project (GPCP) was established by the World Climate Research Program (WCRP) to address the problem of quantifying the distribution of precipitation around the globe over many years. The general approach is to combine the precipitation information available from each of several sources into a final merged product, taking advantage of the strengths of each data type. The microwave estimates are based on Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I) data from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP, United States) satellites that fly in sun-synchronous low-earth orbits. The infrared (IR) precipitation estimates are computed primarily from geostationary satellites (United States, Europe, Japan), and secondarily from polar-orbiting satellites (United States). Additional low-Earth orbit estimates include the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS data from the NASA Aqua, and Television Infrared Observation Satellite Program (TIROS) Operational Vertical Sounder (TOVS) and Outgoing Longwave Radiation Precipitation Index (OPI) data from the NOAA series satellites. The gauge data are assembled and analyzed by the Global Precipitation Climatology Centre (GPCC) of the Deutscher Wetterdienst and by the Climate Prediction Center of NOAA.

The GPCP has promoted the development of an analysis procedure for blending the various estimates together to produce the necessary global gridded precipitation fields. The currently operational procedure is described in Adler et al (2003) and Huffman et al (2009) and has been used to produce the GPCP Version 2.2 Combined Precipitation Data Set, covering the period January 1979 through the present (with some delay). The primary product in the Version 2.2 dataset is a combined observation-only dataset, that is, a gridded analysis based on gauge measurements and satellite estimates of rainfall. There are a total of 27 fields in the data set providing information from the individual and intermediate estimates, including estimates of RMS random error.

All available months in the period January 1979 to December 2011 are used to compute monthly climatological values.

The data set archive consists of unformatted REAL*4 binary files. Each file occupies about 40 KB, and the whole data set contains about 486 KB. The grid on which each field of values is presented is a 2.5°x2.5° latitude--longitude (Cylindrical Equal Distance) global array of points. It is size 144x72, with X (longitude) incrementing most rapidly West to East from the Prime Meridian, and then Y (latitude) incrementing North to South. Grid edges are located at whole- and half-degree values:

First point center = (88.75°N,1.25°E)
Second point center = (88.75°N,3.75°E)
Last point center = (88.75°S,1.25°W)

Units are mm/day.

NASA has discontinued updating this dataset. The last update was Oct 2015.

Variables
merged precipitation (mm/day), precipitation error (mm/day)
ZonalGlobal by 2.5 deg
MeridionalGlobal by 2.5 deg
Verticalsurface  
Temporal Jan to Dec Climatology by 1 month(s)
Static? yes
Volume0.5 Mbytes per year
Serverpublic:
Sourcehttp://precip.gsfc.nasa.gov/ 
Acquired June 3, 2014
APDRC contact
Supplements gpcp_clima.pdf