Title :
ESTAR- and model-derived multiscaling characteristics of soil moisture during SGP´97, Washita ´92 and Washita ´94
Author :
Peters-Lidard, C.D. ; Pan, F. ; Hsu, A.Y. ; O´Neill, P.E.
Author_Institution :
Sch. of Civil & Environ. Eng., Georgia Inst. of Technol., Atlanta, GA, USA
Abstract :
Using a spatially distributed water and energy balance model, we investigate the spatial structure of surface fluxes and states for the Washita ´92 field experiment and the August campaign of the Washita ´94 field experiments. For Washita ´92, the model is validated against gravimetric and remotely-sensed soil moisture, and for Washita ´94, the model is validated against gravimetric soil moisture and measured energy fluxes. The model is shown to reasonably represent land-atmosphere interactions during the experimental periods. Scaling analysis of soil moisture and latent heat flux is indicative of multiscaling behavior. The multiscaling behavior of soil moisture and latent heat flux is hypothesized as a relationship that is a function of average soil moisture, and this relationship seems to fit the data quite well. Similar scaling analysis of important land surface properties indicates simple scaling for porosity, field capacity and leaf area index, and multiscaling for residual soil moisture and the soils-topographic index. This is consistent with model results, which indicate a transition from simple scaling to multiscaling with dry-down. It is hypothesized that this transition is governed by the scaling properties that in wet conditions control infiltration (porosity, field capacity, leaf area index) to properties that in dry conditions control drainage (residual moisture content and soils-topographic index)
Keywords :
hydrology; soil; AD 1992; AD 1994; AD 1997; AGP 97; ESTAR; Southern Great Plains; USA; United States; Washita; Washita 92; Washita 94; energy balance model; hydrology; land atmosphere interaction; land surface; latent heat flux; microwave observations; microwave radiometry; multiscaling; scaling; soil moisture; spatial distribution; spatial structure; surface flux; water balance model; Aerospace engineering; Electronic mail; Hydrology; Land surface; Moisture control; Remote sensing; Soil moisture; Space technology; Spatial resolution; US Department of Agriculture;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2001. IGARSS '01. IEEE 2001 International
Conference_Location :
Sydney, NSW
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7031-7
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2001.976824