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Evaluation of a Surface/Vegetation Parameterization Using Satellite Measurements of Surface Temperature
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1986
Year
Precision AgricultureEngineeringLand UseAgricultural EconomicsTerrestrial SensingEarth ScienceSocial SciencesGround Heat FluxVegetation-atmosphere InteractionsAtmospheric ScienceForest MeteorologySoil MoistureThermal Infrared Remote SensingClimate ChangeMeteorologyGeographySurface TemperatureCrop Growth ModelingEarth Observation DataClimatologyBoundary Layer ModelsSoil ModelingRemote SensingSatellite MeteorologyRemote Sensing SensorInversion Method
Ground measurements of surface-sensible heat flux and soil moisture for a wheat-growing area of Beauce in France were compared with the values derived by inverting two boundary layer models with a surface/vegetation formulation using surface temperature measurements made from NOAA-AVHRR. The results indicated that the trends in the surface heat fluxes and soil moisture observed during the 5 days of the field experiment were effectively captured by the inversion method using the remotely measured radiative temperatures and either of the two boundary layer methods, both of which contain nearly identical vegetation parameterizations described by Taconet et al. (1986). The sensitivity of the results to errors in the initial sounding values or measured surface temperature was tested by varying the initial sounding temperature, dewpoint, and wind speed and the measured surface temperature by amounts corresponding to typical measurement error. In general, the vegetation component was more sensitive to error than the bare soil model.