Peggy LeMone
National Center for Atmospheric Research
ABSTRACT
Influence of Land
Cover and Soil Moisture on the Horizontal Distribution of Sensible and Latent
Heat Fluxes in Southeast Kansas during IHOP_2002 and CASES-97
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Analysis of daytime fair-weather
aircraft and surface-flux tower data from the May-June 2002 International
H2O Project (IHOP_2002) and the April-May 1997 Cooperative Atmosphere
Surface Exchange Study (CASES-97) are used to document the role of vegetation,
soil moisture, and terrain in determining the horizontal variability of
latent heat LE and sensible heat H along a 46-km flight track in SE Kansas.
Combining the two experiments clearly reveals the strong influence of
vegetation cover, with H maxima over dormant vegetation, and, to a lesser
extent, LE maxima over green vegetation. Other effects of vegetation and
the impact of soil moisture emerge through examining the slope Delta_xy_LE/Delta_xy_H
for the best-fit line to plots of LE as a function of H for a given time
interval. Based on the surface energy balance, H+LE = Rnet Gsfc,
where Rnet is the net radiation and Gsfc the flux into the soil, Rnet
Gsfc ~constant implies an approximately 1 slope. Right after
rainfall, H and LE vary too little horizontally to define a slope. After
sufficient drying to produce enough horizontal variation to define a slope,
a steep (~-2) slope emerges. The slope becomes shallower and better defined
with time, as H and LE horizontal variability increases. This trend is
based on land-surface model (LSM) runs and observations collected under
nearly-clear skies and ample moisture; the vegetation is unstressed for
both experiments. The slope remains fairly constant through the day for
CASES-97, but steepens during the afternoon for IHOP_2002 due to LE peaking
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