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neerslagdata

Neerslagdata refers to the measurements and records of precipitation over time and space. It encompasses rain, snow, hail en other forms of liquid or solid precipitation and is collected by national meteorological institutes, weather stations, radar systems, and satellite sensors. Neerslagdata is essential for weather forecasting, climate analysis, hydrology, and water resource management.

Data sources include ground-based gauges such as tipping-bucket and weighing rain gauges, which provide precipitation depth

Common variables are precipitation depth (measured in millimeters), rainfall intensity (mm per hour), duration, and precipitation

Quality and processing involve quality control, homogenization, and bias correction. Corrections may address gauge undercatch, especially

Applications of neerslagdata include flood risk assessment, hydrographic modeling, irrigation planning, urban drainage design, drought monitoring,

and
sometimes
intensity
and
duration.
Automated
weather
stations
collect
multiple
variables
alongside
rain
data.
Radar
rainfall
estimates
offer
areal
coverage,
while
satellites
provide
global
observations,
including
regions
without
dense
gauge
networks.
Data
can
be
reported
as
point
measurements
or
merged
into
gridded
fields
for
regional
analysis.
type
(rain,
snow,
sleet,
hail).
Temporal
resolutions
range
from
hourly
and
daily
to
monthly
and
annual
aggregates.
Spatial
resolution
varies
from
single
gauges
to
gridded
products
with
resolutions
from
about
1
km
to
several
tens
of
kilometers.
for
snow,
and
calibration
of
radar
or
satellite
estimates.
Merging
different
data
sources
often
improves
accuracy
but
introduces
uncertainties.
and
climate
trend
studies.
Access
is
commonly
provided
as
open
data
by
national
meteorological
services
and
international
programs,
with
licensing
that
typically
permits
free
use
with
attribution.
Limitations
include
coverage
gaps,
measurement
biases,
and
uncertainties
in
radar
or
satellite-derived
estimates,
particularly
in
complex
terrain.