13 Channels of GMI
The GMI instrument has 13 channels, each sensitive to different types of precipitation.
The GPM Microwave Imager (GMI) has a swath 550 miles (885 kilometers) wide, giving it a broad view of the extra-tropical cyclone observed off the coast of Japan on March 10, 2014. The GMI instrument has 13 channels, each displayed in this visualization of the data. Each channel is sensitive to a different frequency of microwave energy naturally emitted from or affected by precipitation. As depicted by the graphics, the five channels on the left are sensitive to heavy and moderate rainfall. The four channels in the center sense precipitation mixtures of both snow and ice within the clouds. The mixed layers are often the result of ice or snow melting into rain as it falls. The four channels on the right are sensitive to light rain and snowfall. Multiple channels in each category ensure that GMI captures as full a range as possible of precipitation types.
 
The data from GMI will be used as a reference standard for an international network of partner satellites that also measure precipitation. The data from the GPM Core Observatory and these partner satellites will be unified into a single global precipitation data set every three hours. 
 
Credits
NASA / JAXA