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4.4 Development of a 30-Year Soil Moisture Climatology for Situational Awareness and Public Health ApplicationsThis paper provided a brief background on the work being done at NASA SPoRT and the CDC to create a soil moisture climatology over the CONUS at high spatial resolution, and to provide a valuable source of soil moisture information to the CDC for monitoring conditions that could favor the development of Valley Fever. The soil moisture climatology has multi-faceted applications for both the NOAA/NWS situational awareness in the areas of drought and flooding, and for the Public Health community. SPoRT plans to increase its interaction with the drought monitoring and Public Health communities by enhancing this testbed soil moisture anomaly product. This soil moisture climatology run will also serve as a foundation for upgrading the real-time (currently southeastern CONUS) SPoRT-LIS to a full CONUS domain based on LIS version 7 and incorporating real-time GVF data from the Suomi-NPP Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (Vargas et al. 2013) into LIS-Noah. The upgraded SPoRT-LIS run will serve as a testbed proof-of-concept of a higher-resolution NLDAS-2 modeling member. The climatology run will be extended to near real-time using the NLDAS-2 meteorological forcing from 2011 to present. The fixed 1981-2010 climatology shall provide the soil moisture "normals" for the production of real-time soil moisture anomalies. SPoRT also envisions a web-mapping type of service in which an end-user could put in a request for either an historical or real-time soil moisture anomaly graph for a specified county (as exemplified by Figure 2) and/or for local and regional maps of soil moisture proxy percentiles. Finally, SPoRT seeks to assimilate satellite soil moisture data from the current Soil Moisture Ocean Salinity (SMOS; Blankenship et al. 2014) and the recently-launched NASA Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP; Entekhabi et al. 2010) missions, using the EnKF capability within LIS. The 9-km combined active radar and passive microwave retrieval product from SMAP (Das et al. 2011) has the potential to provide valuable information about the near-surface soil moisture state for improving land surface modeling output.
Document ID
20150023611
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Case, Jonathan L.
(ENSCO, Inc. Huntsville, AL, United States)
Zavodsky, Bradley T.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL United States)
White, Kristopher D.
(National Weather Service Huntsville, AL, United States)
Bell, Jesse E.
(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Asheville, NC, United States)
Date Acquired
December 31, 2015
Publication Date
January 4, 2015
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
MSFC-E-DAA-TN20956
Meeting Information
Meeting: Annual American Meteorological Society Conference
Location: Phoenix, AZ
Country: United States
Start Date: January 4, 2015
End Date: January 8, 2015
Sponsors: American Meteorological Society
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NNM12AC18D
WBS: WBS 281945.02.19.01.28
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
land surface modeling
soil moisture
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