Hain, CR; Anderson, MC (2017). Estimating morning change in land surface temperature from MODIS day/night observations: Applications for surface energy balance modeling. GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 44(19), 9723-9733.
Abstract
Observations of land surface temperature (LST) are crucial for the monitoring of surface energy fluxes from satellite. Methods that require high temporal resolution LST observations (e.g., from geostationary orbit) can be difficult to apply globally because several geostationary sensors are required to attain near-global coverage (60 degrees N to 60 degrees S). While these LST observations are available from polar-orbiting sensors, providing global coverage at higher spatial resolutions, the temporal sampling (twice daily observations) can pose significant limitations. For example, the Atmosphere Land Exchange Inverse (ALEXI) surface energy balance model, used for monitoring evapotranspiration and drought, requires an observation of the morning change in LSTa quantity not directly observable from polar-orbiting sensors. Therefore, we have developed and evaluated a data-mining approach to estimate the midmorning rise in LST from a single sensor (two observations per day) of LST from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) sensor on the Aqua platform. In general, the data-mining approach produced estimates with low relative error (5 to 10%) and statistically significant correlations when compared against geostationary observations. This approach will facilitate global, near-real-time applications of ALEXI at higher spatial and temporal coverage from a single sensor than currently achievable with current geostationary data sets.
DOI:
10.1002/2017GL074952
ISSN:
0094-8276