Summary: | Extreme rainstorms have important socioeconomic consequences, but understanding their fine spatial structures and temporal evolution still remains challenging. In order to achieve this, in view of an evolutionary property of rainstorms, this paper designs a process-oriented algorithm for identifying and tracking rainstorms, named PoAIR. PoAIR uses time-series of raster datasets and consists of three steps. The first step combines an accumulated rainfall time-series and spatial connectivity to identify rainstorm objects at each time snapshot. Secondly, PoAIR adopts the geometrical features of eccentricity, rectangularity, roundness, and shape index, as well as the thematic feature of the mean rainstorm intensity, to match the same rainstorm objects in successive snapshots, and then tracks the same rainstorm objects during a rainstorm evolution sequence. In the third step, an evolutionary property of a rainstorm sequence is used to extrapolate its spatial location and geometrical features at the next time snapshot and reconstructs a rainstorm process by linking rainstorm sequences with an area-overlapping threshold. Experiments on simulated datasets demonstrate that PoAIR performs better than the Thunderstorm Identification, Tracking, Analysis and Nowcasting algorithm (TITAN) in both rainfall tracking and identifying the splitting, merging, and merging-splitting of rainstorm objects. Additionally, applications of PoAIR to Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for Global Precipitation Mission (GPM/IMERG) final products covering mainland China show that PoAIR can effectively track rainstorm objects.
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