
Estimation of Global Ground Heat Flux
Author(s) -
William B. Bennett,
Jingfeng Wang,
Rafael L. Bras
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
journal of hydrometeorology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.733
H-Index - 123
eISSN - 1525-755X
pISSN - 1525-7541
DOI - 10.1175/2008jhm940.1
Subject(s) - environmental science , data assimilation , scale (ratio) , sensitivity (control systems) , flux (metallurgy) , thermal , computer science , meteorology , materials science , physics , quantum mechanics , electronic engineering , engineering , metallurgy
This study investigates the use of a previously published algorithm for estimating ground heat flux (GHF) at the global scale. The method is based on an analytical solution of the diffusion equation for heat transfer in a soil layer and has been shown to be effective at the point scale. The algorithm has several advantageous properties: 1) it only needs a single-level input of surface (skin) temperature, 2) the time-mean GHF can be derived directly from time-mean skin temperature, 3) it has reduced sensitivity to the variability in soil thermal properties and moisture, 4) it does not requires snow depth, and 5) it is computationally effective. A global map of the necessary thermal inertia parameter is derived using reanalysis data as a function of soil type. These parameter estimates are comparable to values obtained from in situ observations. The new global GHF estimates are generally consistent with the reanalysis GHF output simulated using two-layer soil hydrology models. The authors argue that the new algorithm is more robust and trustworthy in regions where they differ. The proposed algorithm offers potential benefits for direct assimilation of observations of surface temperature as well as GHF into the reanalysis models at various time scales.