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Harmonic propagation of variability in surface energy balance within a coupled soil‐vegetation‐atmosphere system
Author(s) -
Gentine P.,
Polcher J.,
Entekhabi D.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
water resources research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.863
H-Index - 217
eISSN - 1944-7973
pISSN - 0043-1397
DOI - 10.1029/2010wr009268
Subject(s) - environmental science , atmospheric sciences , energy balance , forcing (mathematics) , heat flux , planetary boundary layer , sensible heat , soil thermal properties , turbulence , energy budget , heat transfer , mechanics , soil science , soil water , physics , thermodynamics , field capacity
The response of a soil‐vegetation‐atmosphere continuum model to incoming radiation forcing is investigated in order to gain insights into the coupling of soil and atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) states and fluxes. The response is characterized through amplitude and phase propagation of the harmonics in order to differentiate between the response of the system to forcing at different frequencies (daily to hourly to near instantaneous). Stochastic noise is added to the surface energy balance. The amplitude of the noise is maximum at midday when the incoming radiative forcing is also at its peak. The temperatures and turbulent heat fluxes are shown to act as low‐pass filters of the incoming radiation or energy budget noise variability at the surface. Conversely, soil heat flux is shown to act as a high‐pass filter because of the strong contrast in the soil and air heat capacities and thermal conductivities. As a consequence, heat diffusion formulations that numerically dampen such forcing are potentially incapable of representing rapid fluctuations in soil heat flux (≤30 min) and therefore introduce errors in the land‐surface energy partitioning. The soil‐vegetation‐ABL continuum model and an electrical analogy for it are used to explain the frequency‐dependent differences in the relative effectiveness of turbulent heat fluxes versus ground heat flux in dissipating noise in radiative forcing.