Title :
Removal of nonprecipitation echoes in weather radar using multifractals and intensity
Author :
Charalampidis, Dimitrios ; Kasparis, Takis ; Jones, W. Linwood
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., New Orleans Univ., LA, USA
fDate :
5/1/2002 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
In this paper, we present an algorithm for the automated removal of nonprecipitation related echoes such as atmospheric anomalous propagation (AP) in the lower elevations of meteorological-radar volume scans. The motivation or the development of this technique is the need for an objective quality control algorithm that minimizes human interaction. The algorithm uses both textural and intensity information obtained from the two lower-elevation reflectivity maps. The texture of the reflectivity maps is analyzed with the help of multifractals. Four multifractal exponents are computed for each pixel of the reflectivity maps and are compared to a "strict" and a "soft" threshold. Pixels with multifractal exponents larger than the strict threshold are marked as "nonrain," and pixels with exponents smaller than the soft threshold are marked as "rain." Pixels with all other exponent values are further examined using intensity information. We evaluate our QC procedure by comparison with the Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission (TRMM) Ground Validation Project quality control algorithm that was developed by TRMM scientists. Comparisons are based on a number of selected cases where nonprecipitation and a variety of rain events are present, and results show that both algorithms are effective in eliminating nonprecipitation related echoes while maintaining the rain pixels
Keywords :
atmospheric techniques; fractals; geophysical signal processing; meteorological radar; remote sensing by radar; algorithm; atmosphere; automated removal; intensity; measurement technique; meteorological radar; meteorology; multifractal; nonprecipitation echo removal; precipitation; radar remote sensing; rain; weather radar; Birds; Clutter; Fractals; Meteorological radar; Quality control; Radar antennas; Radar scattering; Rain; Reflectivity; Space missions;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2002.1010899