“…Although satellite-based microwave sensors can infer the spatial distribution of liquid water path (Wood and Hartmann, 2006;Miller and Yuter, 2013) and precipitation rate (Ellis et al, 2009;Adler et al, 2009;Rapp et al, 2013), they have poor horizontal resolution and suffer from surface inference, causing them to under-sample the cloud field variability and to underreport boundary layer cloud and precipitation occurrence (Schumacher and Houze, 2000;Rapp et al, 2013). In contrast, airborne (Stevens et al, 2005;Wood et al, 2011;Moyer and Young, 1994;Vali et al, 1998;Paluch and Lenschow, 1991;Sharon et al, 2006) and ship-based (Yuter et al, 2000;Comstock et al, 2005;Feingold et al, 2010) sensors can resolve the spatial and temporal variability of the cloud and precipitation field, but field campaigns deploying such sensors are often expensive to conduct and limited in temporal duration (Stevens et al, 2003;Bretherton et al, 2004;Rauber et al, 2007).…”