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Heterogeneity and scaling land-atmospheric water and energy fluxes in climate systemsThe effects of small-scale heterogeneity in land surface characteristics on the large-scale fluxes of water and energy in land-atmosphere system has become a central focus of many of the climatology research experiments. The acquisition of high resolution land surface data through remote sensing and intensive land-climatology field experiments (like HAPEX and FIFE) has provided data to investigate the interactions between microscale land-atmosphere interactions and macroscale models. One essential research question is how to account for the small scale heterogeneities and whether 'effective' parameters can be used in the macroscale models. To address this question of scaling, three modeling experiments were performed and are reviewed in the paper. The first is concerned with the aggregation of parameters and inputs for a terrestrial water and energy balance model. The second experiment analyzed the scaling behavior of hydrologic responses during rain events and between rain events. The third experiment compared the hydrologic responses from distributed models with a lumped model that uses spatially constant inputs and parameters. The results show that the patterns of small scale variations can be represented statistically if the scale is larger than a representative elementary area scale, which appears to be about 2 - 3 times the correlation length of the process. For natural catchments this appears to be about 1 - 2 sq km. The results concerning distributed versus lumped representations are more complicated. For conditions when the processes are nonlinear, then lumping results in biases; otherwise a one-dimensional model based on 'equivalent' parameters provides quite good results. Further research is needed to fully understand these conditions.
Document ID
19940011557
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Wood, Eric F.
(Princeton Univ. NJ, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1993
Publication Information
Publication: Research into the Influence of Spatial Variability and Scale on the Parameterization of Hydrological Processes
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Meeting Information
Meeting: IHP/IAHS George Kovacs Colloquium on Space and Time Variability and Interdependencies in Various Hydrological Processes
Location: Paris
Country: France
Start Date: July 3, 1992
End Date: July 4, 1992
Accession Number
94N16030
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAG5-899
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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