Entin et al., 2000
Entin, Jared K., Alan Robock, Konstantin Y. Vinnikov, Steven E. Hollinger, Suxia Liu, and A. Namkai, 2000: Temporal and spatial scales of observed
soil moisture
variations in the extratropics. J. Geophys. Res., 105, 11,865-11,877.
ABSTRACT
Scales of soil moisture
variations are important for understanding patterns of climate change, for
developing and evaluating land surface models, for designing surface soil
moisture observation networks, and for determining the appropriate resolution
for satellite-based remote sensing instruments for soil moisture. Here we take
advantage of a new archive of actual in situ soil moisture observations from
Illinois and Iowa in the United States, and from Russia, Mongolia, and China,
to evaluate the observed temporal and spatial scales of soil moisture
variations. We separate the variance into two components, the very small scale
of interest to hydrologists, determined by soils, topography, vegetation, and
root structure, and the large scale, which is forced by the atmosphere. This
larger scale, determined by precipitation and evaporation patterns, is of
interest for global climate modeling, and we characterize the small scale as
white noise for our analysis, keeping in mind that it is an important component
of soil moisture variations for other problems. We find that the atmospheric
spatial scale for all regions is about 500 km, and the atmospheric temporal
scale is about 2 months for the top 1-m soil layer. The temporal scale for the
top 10-cm layer is slightly less than 2 months. The white noise component of
the variance for temporal variations ranges from 50% for the top 10 cm to
20-40% for the top 1 m. For spatial variations, the white noise component is
the same for all depths, but varies with region from 30% for Illinois to 70%
for Mongolia. Nevertheless, the red noise (atmospheric component) can be seen
in all regions. These results are for Northern Hemisphere midlatitudes, and
would not necessarily apply to other latitudes. Also, the results are based on
observations taken from grassland or agricultural areas, and may not be similar
to those of areas with other vegetation types. In China, a region with
substantial latitudinal variation, the temporal scale for the top 1 m varies
from 1 month in the south to 2.5 months in the north, demonstrating the
control of potential evaporation on the scales. Seasonal analysis of the scales
of soil moisture for Illinois shows that during the winter the temporal scales
are long, though the spatial scales are short. Both appear to be attributable
to the seasonal cycle of potential evaporation.
Prepared by Alan Robock (robock@envsci.rutgers.edu ) - Last
updated on June 15, 2000