Spatial and Temporal Evolution of Evaporation in a Drying Soil
Abstract
The Los Alamos Scanning Raman Lidar is capable of making spatially resolved estimates of evapotranspiration over an area approaching a square kilometer, with relatively fine (25 meter) spatial resolution, using three dimensional measurements of water vapor concentrations. The method is based upon Monin-Obukhov similarity theory applied to spatially and temporally averaged data. During SMEX02, the instrument was positioned between fields of corn and soybeans. Periodic maps of evapotranspiration rates over the two fields are presented. The maps show the relatively uniform response in the early morning when surface moisture is available and progress through the day as surface water becomes increasingly limited. The change in ET rates between the two crop types is noted as are the spatial patterns as the surface dries non-uniformly.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2005
- Bibcode:
- 2005AGUFM.H11B1262E
- Keywords:
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- 1631 Land/atmosphere interactions (1218;
- 1843;
- 3322);
- 1819 Geographic Information Systems (GIS);
- 1866 Soil moisture