Title :
Does evapotranspiration influence the strength of the North American monsoon? — Multitemporal satellite analysis of evapotranspiration and its effects
Author :
Doklestic, Dea ; Smith, Ronald B.
Abstract :
We test the hypothesis that strength of North American monsoon is influenced by surface processes such as evapotranspiration and sensible heat flux. In order to estimate evapotranspiration, three different satellite remote sensing-based methods are used: We use the Penman-Monteith approach developed by Cleugh et al. (2007) [2] and the revised Penman-Monteith approach developed by Mu et al. (2007) [5]. Furthermore, we use a simple latent heat residual method. All three methods use MODIS data as input datasets. The results obtained by the three methods are compared against flux tower measurements. Sensible heat flux is estimated using satellite measurements of land surface temperature and balloon sounding measurements of air temperature. Evapotranspiration shows a sharp peak during the monsoon season and this feature is captured by all three methods. This lends credence to the hypothesis that increased latent heat flux results in more monsoonal precipitation.
Keywords :
atmospheric humidity; atmospheric precipitation; atmospheric temperature; evaporation; land surface temperature; remote sensing; transpiration; MODIS data analysis; North American monsoon; Penman-Monteith approach; air temperature; balloon sounding measurement; evapotranspiration process; flux tower measurement; land surface temperature measurement; latent heat flux analysis; latent heat residual method; monsoonal precipitation analysis; multitemporal satellite analysis; satellite remote sensing-based method; Equations; Heating; Land surface; Land surface temperature; MODIS; Mathematical model; Temperature measurement; Evapotranspiration; Land-atmosphere feedbacks; North-American Monsoon;
Conference_Titel :
Analysis of Multi-temporal Remote Sensing Images (Multi-Temp), 2011 6th International Workshop on the
Conference_Location :
Trento
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4577-1202-9
DOI :
10.1109/Multi-Temp.2011.6005076