Abstract
An operational use of the actual evapotranspiration estimates requires the integration from instantaneous to daily values.This can commonly be achieved under the hypothesis of daytime self-preservation of the evaporative fraction. In thisstudy, it has been evaluated the effect of this assumption on the assessment of daily evapotranspiration from proximitysensing images acquired at hourly intervals over a homogeneous olive groove. Results have been validated bycomparison with observations made by a micrometeorological (EC-flux tower) and an eco-physiological (sap flux)sensor. SEBAL model has been applied to thermal and multispectral images acquired during a clear day on August 2009 trough a FLIR A320G thermal camera and a Tetracam MCA II multispectral camera, installed on a tethered helium balloon. Thermal and multispectral images were characterized by very high spatial resolution.This experiment aims to analyze two effects: 1) the consistency of the self-preservation hypothesis for daily estimates of the actual evapotranspiration from hourly assessments at different times of the day; 2) the effects of the spatial resolution on the performances of the energy balance model.To evaluate the effects of the spatial resolution, semi-hourly observations made by a flux tower and sap-flow measures were compared to the evapotranspiration estimates performed using downscaled images at resolutions close to canopy sizes (2, 5 and 10 m).Results show that the best estimates are obtained with a spatial resolution comparable to the average size of the canopy with images taken approximately at 10 UTC.
Lingua originale | English |
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Numero di pagine | 13 |
Stato di pubblicazione | Published - 2013 |
All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes
- ???subjectarea.asjc.2500.2504???
- ???subjectarea.asjc.3100.3104???
- ???subjectarea.asjc.1700.1706???
- ???subjectarea.asjc.2600.2604???
- ???subjectarea.asjc.2200.2208???