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Components of near-surface energy balance derived from satellite soundings-Part 1: noontime net available energy

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Published
  • Kaniska Mallick
  • Andrew James Jarvis
  • G. Wohlfahrt
  • G. Kiely
  • T. Hirano
  • A. Miyata
  • S. Yamamoto
  • Lucien Hoffmann
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<mark>Journal publication date</mark>23/01/2015
<mark>Journal</mark>Biogeosciences
Volume12
Number of pages19
Pages (from-to)433-451
Publication StatusPublished
<mark>Original language</mark>English

Abstract

This paper introduces a relatively simple method for recovering global fields of monthly midday (13:30 LT) near-surface net available energy (the sum of the sensible and latent heat flux or the difference between the net radiation and surface heat accumulation) using satellite visible and infrared products derived from the AIRS (Atmospheric Infrared Sounder) and MODIS (MODerate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer) platforms. The method focuses on first specifying net surface radiation by considering its various shortwave and longwave components. This was then used in a surface energy balance equation in conjunction with satellite day–night surface temperature difference to derive 12 h discrete time estimates of surface system heat capacity and heat accumulation, leading directly to retrieval for surface net available energy. Both net radiation and net available energy estimates were evaluated against ground truth data taken from 30 terrestrial tower sites affiliated with the FLUXNET network covering 7 different biome classes. This revealed a relatively good agreement between the satellite and tower data, with a pooled root-mean-square deviation of 98 and 72 W m−2 for monthly 13:30 LT net radiation and net available energy, respectively, although both quantities were underestimated by approximately 25 and 10%, respectively, relative to the tower observation. Analysis of the individual shortwave and longwave components of the net radiation revealed the downwelling shortwave radiation to be main source of this systematic underestimation.