Rainfall is analyzed for the Indian and west Pacific Oceans. The analysis u
ses a multichannel scheme to retrieve open-ocean rain rate from brightness
temperatures measured between 1979 and 1986 by the Nimbus-7 Scanning Multic
hannel Microwave Radiometer. Rain rates were averaged over calendar months
for 1 degrees boxes. These rain rates were checked against two published cl
imatologies. They were analyzed in light of historical climatologies of rai
nfall over the Indian and west Pacific Oceans.
Except for the Somali jet, the scheme adequately represented ambient condit
ions over the Indian and west Pacific Oceans. Rain tended to fail in two ba
nds paired across the equator Over the Indian Ocean, the southern member co
nsistently dominated the northern member. Over the west Pacific Ocean, at t
imes through the course of the year, each member dominated the other. Close
to the East Indies northern and southern members merged. Bands were modula
ted by a pair of wavelike conglomerates. Following the sun, each wave congl
omerate strengthened on the poleward legs of its track and weakened on the
equatorward legs. One wave conglomerate appeared to follow a clockwise loop
connecting waters near Madagascar with the Arabian Sea, India, and the Bay
of Bengal. The other appeared to follow a counterclockwise loop connecting
Austral-Melanesian waters with the Philippine Sea, the South China Sea, an
d the Bay of Bengal. Converging in boreal spring on northbound legs, the wa
ve conglomerates appeared to merge over South Asia.