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* WV-3177: Rename EOSDIS Worldview to NASA Worldview (#5316) * Remove EOSDIS * Update EOSDIS to ESDIS and LANCE acronyms * Updated eslint-plugin-n (#5317) * dependency updates * WV-3210 Distraction Free Timezone Fix (#5320) * Added kioskMode check for timezone label * Separated ternary statements * Update IMERG to version 7 (#5321) * UAT-v4.42.0 --------- Co-authored-by: Patrick Moulden <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: minniewong <[email protected]> Co-authored-by: PatchesMaps <[email protected]>
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...t/common/config/metadata/layers/multi-mission/imerg/IMERG_Precipitation_Rate.md
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The IMERG Precipitation Rate layer displays rain rate and snow rate in millimeters per hour (mm/hr). It is estimated by the Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) (IMERG) algorithm. The IMERG algorithm uses passive-microwave data from the GPM constellation of satellites and also infrared data from geosynchronous satellites. IMERG “morphs” observations to earlier or later times using wind obtained from weather-model analyses. The output field has 0.1 x 0.1 degree latitude-longitude resolution (approximately 11 by 11 km at the Equator). The grid covers the globe, although precipitation cannot always be estimated near the Poles. Within hours of observations being collected, the NASA Precipitation Processing System (PPS) provides Early IMERG estimates, while the higher-quality Final IMERG estimates are produced approximately 4 months later, once calibration datasets become available such as monthly rain-gauge analyses. The imagery viewed in Worldview and the Global Imagery Browse Services (GIBS) is a 2 km, custom daily imagery product generated by PPS from 30-minute Early IMERG (GPM_3IMERGHHE) and Final IMERG (GPM_3IMERGHH) data products. | ||
The IMERG Precipitation Rate layer displays rain rate and snow rate in millimeters per hour (mm/hr). It is estimated by the Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) (IMERG) algorithm. The IMERG algorithm uses passive-microwave observations from the GPM constellation of satellites, infrared observations from geosynchronous satellites, and calibration data derived from rain gauges. IMERG “morphs” observations to earlier or later times using wind obtained from weather-model analyses. The output field has 0.1 x 0.1 degree latitude-longitude resolution (approximately 11 by 11 km at the Equator). The grid covers the globe, although precipitation cannot always be estimated near the Poles. Within hours of observations being collected, the NASA Precipitation Processing System (PPS) provides Early IMERG estimates, while the higher-quality Final IMERG estimates are produced approximately 4 months later, once calibration datasets become available such as monthly rain-gauge analyses. The imagery viewed in Worldview and the Global Imagery Browse Services (GIBS) is a custom daily imagery product generated by PPS from 30-minute Early IMERG (GPM_3IMERGHHE) and Final IMERG (GPM_3IMERGHH) data products. | ||
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References: GPM_3IMERGHHE [doi:10.5067/GPM/IMERG/3B-HH-E/06](https://doi.org/10.5067/GPM/IMERG/3B-HH-E/06) and GPM_3IMERGHH [doi:10.5067/GPM/IMERG/3B-HH/07](https://doi.org/10.5067/GPM/IMERG/3B-HH/07). Please note that, while the above half hourly data references are used by PPS as a basis to generate the daily IMERG imagery viewed in Worldview/GIBS, there is not a specific data product that directly corresponds to this daily imagery. | ||
References: GPM_3IMERGHHE [doi:10.5067/GPM/IMERG/3B-HH-E/07](https://doi.org/10.5067/GPM/IMERG/3B-HH-E/07) and GPM_3IMERGHH [doi:10.5067/GPM/IMERG/3B-HH/07](https://doi.org/10.5067/GPM/IMERG/3B-HH/07). Please note that, while the above half hourly data references are used by PPS as a basis to generate the daily IMERG imagery viewed in Worldview/GIBS, there is not a specific data product that directly corresponds to this daily imagery. |
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