“…However, because rain gauges themselves are prone to several error sources, the concept of ground truth is questionable: "ground truth is the amount of rain that would have reached the ground if the rain gauge had not been there". Moreover, after adjustment of the radar data using rain gauge measurements (called "calibration" at the time (e.g., Collier, 1986)), several errors and inconsistencies remained which this approach was not able to resolve. As opposed to the largely statistical approach of the 1980s, the more physical approach to radar rainfall retrieval adopted since the 1990s considers the principle of radar measurements and the microstructure of rainfall in quite some detail (e.g., Smith et al, 1996;Andrieu et al, 1997;Creutin et al, 1997;Serrar et al, 2000;Sánchez-Diezma et al, 2000;Berne et al, 2005a,b;Delrieu et al, 2005;Berenguer et al, 2005).…”