Difference between revisions of "CHIRPS FAQ"

From CHG-Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
(Revised wiki markup to reflect wiki best practices.)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
==Is there a CHIRPS website?==
 +
Yes: http://chg.geog.ucsb.edu/data/chirps/index.html
  
CHIRPS FAQ's
+
==Where can I get CHIRPS data?==
 +
===Via a web browser===
 +
ftp://chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu/pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/
  
'''Is there a CHIRPS website?'''
+
OR, equivalently
      yes,
 
      http://chg2.geog.ucsb.edu/data/chirps/index.html
 
  
'''Where can I get CHIRPS data?'''
+
http://tinyurl.com/chg-chirps
      in a browser go to,
 
      ftp://chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu/pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/
 
      or equivalently,    tinyurl.com/chg-chirps
 
      .
 
      via anonymous ftp,
 
      ftp chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu
 
      username: anonymous
 
      password: your_email_address
 
      cd  /pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/
 
  
'''What is the spatial resolution of CHIRPS?'''
+
===Via anonymous ftp===
      Chirps is produced at 0.05 x 0.05 degree spatial resolution
+
ftp chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu
      For daily Africa data we also provide a 0.25 x 0.25 degree spatial resolution product
+
username: anonymous
 +
password: your_email_address
 +
cd  /pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/
  
'''What are the spatial domain available for CHIRPS?'''
+
==What is the spatial resolution of CHIRPS?==
      Global          50N-50S, 180W-180E  @0.05 deg resolution = maps 7200 x 2000 pixels
+
*Chirps is produced at 0.05 x 0.05 degree spatial resolution.
      Africa          40N-40S  20W- 55E  @0.05 deg resolution = maps 1500 x 1600 pixels
+
*For daily Africa data we also provide a 0.25 x 0.25 degree spatial resolution product.
      CAmer-Carib  23.5N- 6N  93W- 57W  @0.05 deg resolution = maps  720 x  350 pixels
 
  
'''What are the time steps available for CHIRPS?'''
+
==What are the spatial domain available for CHIRPS?==
      pentad
+
*Global        50N-50S, 180W-180E  @0.05 deg resolution = maps 7200 x 2000 pixels
      dekad
+
*Africa        40N-40S,  20W- 55E  @0.05 deg resolution = maps 1500 x 1600 pixels
      monthly
+
*CAmer-Carib  23.5N-6N, 93W- 57W   @0.05 deg resolution = maps  720 x  350 pixels
      daily   (for Africa)
 
  
'''What are the file formats available for CHIRPS?'''
+
==What are the time steps available for CHIRPS?==
      .tif
+
*pentad
      .bil
+
*dekad
 +
*monthly
 +
*daily (Africa only)
  
'''What units is CHIRPS in?'''
+
==What are the file formats available for CHIRPS?==
      Total mm for given time step, mm/pentad, mm/month, etc.
+
*.tif
 +
*.bil
  
'''What value is used for Bad Values?'''
+
==What units is CHIRPS in?==
      -9999 
+
Total mm for given time step, mm/pentad, mm/month, etc.
  
'''What is the latency of the CHIRPS product?'''
+
==What value is used for Bad Values?==
      There is a rapid, gts-only, CHIRPS available 2 days after the end of a pentad
+
-9999 
      Final CHIRPS (all station data) is available sometime after the 15th of the following month.
 
  
'''What is the temporal range for CHIRPS?'''
+
==What is the latency of the CHIRPS product?==
      CHIRPS is available from 1981 to near-real time
+
*There is a rapid (gts-only) CHIRPS available 2 days after the end of a pentad.
 +
*Final CHIRPS (all station data) is available sometime after the 15th of the following month.
  
'''Who do I contact with CHIRPS questions?'''
+
==What is the temporal range for CHIRPS?==
      Pete Peterson
+
CHIRPS is available from 1981 to near-real time.
      pete@geog.ucsb.edu
 
  
 +
==Who do I contact with CHIRPS questions?==
 +
[[User:Pete| Pete Peterson]]
  
'''What is the spatial density of station data used in CHIRPS?'''
+
[mailto:pete@geog.ucsb.edu pete@geog.ucsb.edu]
      The closest thing we have available is what we call reality checks
 
      we post in EWX (Early Warning Explorer). Take a look here,
 
      http://chg2.geog.ucsb.edu:8080/EWX/index.html
 
          on the left open up the Africa tab
 
              then double click on,  RCHECKS-STNS
 
      You will have to zoom in to see squares with black dots in the middle.
 
      These are 10x10 pixel boxes of the station value on top of the CHIRPS field.
 
      A 'reality check' to see if the stations match the background field.
 
      You can zoom in on a location then cycle through month/years to see how
 
      the # of stations changes with time.  Its pretty significant in some areas.
 
Also,
 
      ftp://chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu/pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/qc/stations_used/monthly/
 
      Each file represents a single month of CHIRPS for the Globe.
 
      There are 5 columns,
 
      year,month,latitude,longitude,station_used?
 
      Each file has 52,743 lines representing our total list of anchor stations used in CHIRPS.
 
      The last column, station_used is
 
            0  if no station data used for that location/time
 
            1  if we had station data for that location/time.
 
  
'''How was CHIRPS funded?'''
 
      CHIRPS has been supported by funding from
 
      the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)     
 
      the USAID Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET)
 
      the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)  and
 
      the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
 
  
'''Who uses CHIRPS?'''
+
==What is the spatial density of station data used in CHIRPS?==
 +
The closest thing we have available is what we call "reality checks" we post in EWX (Early Warning Explorer).
  
'''How good is CHIRPS?'''
+
You can access EWX [http://chg.geog.ucsb.edu:8080/EWX/index.html here].
      For its intended uses, Seasonal Drought monitoring and Trend Analysis, it is very good,
+
*On the left open up the Africa tab.
      see [ftp://chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu/pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/docs/CHIRPS-v1.8_validation.pptx validation-pptx] (under construction)
+
*Then double click on RCHECKS-STNS
      For other uses it depends on the questions you are asking.  
+
*You will have to zoom in to see squares with black dots in the middle.
     
+
**These are 10x10 pixel boxes of the station value on top of the CHIRPS field, a "reality check" to see if the stations match the background field.
 +
**You can zoom in on a location, then cycle through month/years to see how the number of stations changes with time. It is pretty significant in some areas.
  
'''How do I reference CHIRPS in publications?'''
+
Also, ftp://chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu/pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/qc/stations_used/monthly/:
      Funk, C.C., Peterson, P.J., Landsfeld, M.F., Pedreros, D.H., Verdin, J.P.,
+
*Each file represents a single month of CHIRPS for the Globe.
      Rowland, J.D., Romero, B.E., Husak, G.J., Michaelsen, J.C., and Verdin, A.P.,  
+
*There are 5 columns
      2014, A quasi-global precipitation time series for drought monitoring: U.S.
+
**year
      Geological Survey Data Series 832, 4 p.  http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/832/
+
**month
 +
**latitude
 +
**longitude
 +
**station_used?
 +
*Each file has 52,743 lines representing our total list of anchor stations used in CHIRPS.
 +
*The last column, station_used is
 +
**0  if no station data used for that location/time
 +
**1  if we had station data for that location/time.
  
'''Is there a copy of the paper online?'''
+
==How was CHIRPS funded?==
      yes,
+
CHIRPS has been supported by funding from:
      tinyurl.com/chg-chirps/docs/USGS-DS832.CHIRPS.pdf
+
*the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
      http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/832/
+
*the USAID Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET)
 +
*the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)  and
 +
*the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
  
 +
==Who uses CHIRPS?==
  
'''What's on the agenda for future CHIRPS?'''
+
==How good is CHIRPS?==
      redo the CHPclim to include more station data and avoid tiling artifacts
+
For its intended uses, Seasonal Drought monitoring and Trend Analysis, it is very good; see [ftp://chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu/pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/docs/CHIRPS-v1.8_validation.pptx validation-pptx] (under construction)
      include fGSOD data from 1981-1999
+
For other uses it depends on the questions you are asking. <!-- Recommend rewording, perhaps expanding slightly or deleting entirely. Vague verbiage in a FAQ is sometimes worse than no mention at all. -->
      include fGTS  data from 1984-1994
+
 
      include Peru-ANA station data
+
==How do I reference CHIRPS in publications?==
      include an additive step to the blending
+
Funk, C.C., Peterson, P.J., Landsfeld, M.F., Pedreros, D.H., Verdin, J.P.,
      conside re-prioritorizing fGTS above fGSOD
+
Rowland, J.D., Romero, B.E., Husak, G.J., Michaelsen, J.C., and Verdin, A.P.,
 +
2014, A quasi-global precipitation time series for drought monitoring: U.S.
 +
Geological Survey Data Series 832, 4 p.  http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/832/
 +
 
 +
==Is there a copy of the paper online?==
 +
Yes.
 +
*[http://tinyurl.com/chg-chirps/docs/USGS-DS832.CHIRPS.pdf CHG-local source ]
 +
*[http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/832/ USGS website ]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
==What's on the agenda for future CHIRPS?==
 +
*redo the CHPclim to include more station data and avoid tiling artifacts
 +
*include fGSOD data from 1981-1999
 +
*include fGTS  data from 1984-1994
 +
*include Peru-ANA station data
 +
*include an additive step to the blending
 +
*consider re-prioritorizing fGTS above fGSOD

Revision as of 13:56, 15 May 2014

Is there a CHIRPS website?

Yes: http://chg.geog.ucsb.edu/data/chirps/index.html

Where can I get CHIRPS data?

Via a web browser

ftp://chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu/pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/

OR, equivalently

http://tinyurl.com/chg-chirps

Via anonymous ftp

ftp chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu
username: anonymous 
password: your_email_address
cd  /pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/

What is the spatial resolution of CHIRPS?

  • Chirps is produced at 0.05 x 0.05 degree spatial resolution.
  • For daily Africa data we also provide a 0.25 x 0.25 degree spatial resolution product.

What are the spatial domain available for CHIRPS?

  • Global 50N-50S, 180W-180E @0.05 deg resolution = maps 7200 x 2000 pixels
  • Africa 40N-40S, 20W- 55E @0.05 deg resolution = maps 1500 x 1600 pixels
  • CAmer-Carib 23.5N-6N, 93W- 57W @0.05 deg resolution = maps 720 x 350 pixels

What are the time steps available for CHIRPS?

  • pentad
  • dekad
  • monthly
  • daily (Africa only)

What are the file formats available for CHIRPS?

  • .tif
  • .bil

What units is CHIRPS in?

Total mm for given time step, mm/pentad, mm/month, etc.

What value is used for Bad Values?

-9999

What is the latency of the CHIRPS product?

  • There is a rapid (gts-only) CHIRPS available 2 days after the end of a pentad.
  • Final CHIRPS (all station data) is available sometime after the 15th of the following month.

What is the temporal range for CHIRPS?

CHIRPS is available from 1981 to near-real time.

Who do I contact with CHIRPS questions?

Pete Peterson

pete@geog.ucsb.edu


What is the spatial density of station data used in CHIRPS?

The closest thing we have available is what we call "reality checks" we post in EWX (Early Warning Explorer).

You can access EWX here.

  • On the left open up the Africa tab.
  • Then double click on RCHECKS-STNS
  • You will have to zoom in to see squares with black dots in the middle.
    • These are 10x10 pixel boxes of the station value on top of the CHIRPS field, a "reality check" to see if the stations match the background field.
    • You can zoom in on a location, then cycle through month/years to see how the number of stations changes with time. It is pretty significant in some areas.

Also, ftp://chg-ftpout.geog.ucsb.edu/pub/org/chg/products/CHIRPS-latest/qc/stations_used/monthly/:

  • Each file represents a single month of CHIRPS for the Globe.
  • There are 5 columns
    • year
    • month
    • latitude
    • longitude
    • station_used?
  • Each file has 52,743 lines representing our total list of anchor stations used in CHIRPS.
  • The last column, station_used is
    • 0 if no station data used for that location/time
    • 1 if we had station data for that location/time.

How was CHIRPS funded?

CHIRPS has been supported by funding from:

  • the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)
  • the USAID Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET)
  • the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and
  • the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)

Who uses CHIRPS?

How good is CHIRPS?

For its intended uses, Seasonal Drought monitoring and Trend Analysis, it is very good; see validation-pptx (under construction) For other uses it depends on the questions you are asking.

How do I reference CHIRPS in publications?

Funk, C.C., Peterson, P.J., Landsfeld, M.F., Pedreros, D.H., Verdin, J.P., Rowland, J.D., Romero, B.E., Husak, G.J., Michaelsen, J.C., and Verdin, A.P., 2014, A quasi-global precipitation time series for drought monitoring: U.S. Geological Survey Data Series 832, 4 p. http://pubs.usgs.gov/ds/832/

Is there a copy of the paper online?

Yes.


What's on the agenda for future CHIRPS?

  • redo the CHPclim to include more station data and avoid tiling artifacts
  • include fGSOD data from 1981-1999
  • include fGTS data from 1984-1994
  • include Peru-ANA station data
  • include an additive step to the blending
  • consider re-prioritorizing fGTS above fGSOD