Global Drought and Flood. Группа авторов

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errors, atmospheric corrections, and assumed surface emissivity (Anderson et al., 1997; Mecikalski et al., 1999). This represents a significant upgrade over models that use observations of absolute temperature in their computations.

      The radiometric temperature of a vegetated surface is the ensemble average of the individual thermodynamic temperature of the soil (T s), and the vegetation (T c), weighted by their contribution to the brightness temperature:

      (2.1)equation

      where f( ϕ ) is the fraction of the sensor view angle occupied by vegetation when viewed at an angle ϕ from nadir (Norman & Becker, 1995). For a canopy with a random distribution of leaves, a spherical distribution of leaf angles, and a leaf area index F,

      (2.2)equation

      The net balance of energy at the Earth’s surface can be represented by

      (2.3)equation

      where R n is the net radiation above the vegetated surface, and H, LE, and G are the net fluxes of sensible, latent, and ground conduction heating, respectively.

Schematic illustrations of (a) the surface-layer component of the ALEXI model. (b) The surface-layer model component is applied at times t1 and t2 during the morning hours, returning instantaneous sensible heat flux estimates.

      (Source: From Mecikalski, J. M., G. R. Diak, M. C. Anderson & J. M. Norman (1999). Estimating fluxes on continental scales using remotely sensed data in an atmosphere–land exchange model. Journal of Applied Meteorology, 38, 1352–1369. © American Meteorological Society.)

      (2.4)equation

      The ABL component of ALEXI is a simple slab model which describes the dynamics of the atmospheric boundary layer and is used as a closure technique to evaluate the morning evolution of air temperature, Ta, in the surface layer. It is assumed that all the air within the mixed layer is at a uniform potential temperature, and this value is related to the surface air temperature by

      (2.5)equation

      where p is the atmospheric pressure (in kPa) at the surface and R/c p = 0.286 (Anderson et al., 1997). Tennekes (1973) showed that the height of the convective boundary layer at any time is uniquely defined by the current surface air temperature and a morning temperature sounding. McNaughton and Spriggs (1986) presented a simplified conservation equation describing the growth of a convective boundary layer over time, assuming no subsidence and horizontal advection:

      (2.6)equation

Data source Specifications Resolution Format Example file names Size (MB)
GOES East and West Band 02 4 km McIDAS 1350954623.goes13.2014.001.061520.BAND_02 ~25
GOES East and West Band 04 4 km McIDAS 1350954623.goes13.2014.001.061520.BAND_04 ~25
GSIP L2 product 4 km NetCDF gsipL2_goes13_GENHEM_2014198_1145.nc.gz gsipL2_goes15_GWNHEM_2014198_1400.nc.gz ~20–30
VIIRS Global NDVI and EVI 375 m HDF5 GVF‐ASEVI‐P2_s20120726_e20120801_h00v01.h5 ~800
IMS Daily Northern Hemisphere Snow and Ice Analysis 24 km ASCII ims2014017_24km.asc ~1

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