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Percent
coverage
mm h-1
0
- Calibrated data is necessary for accurate maps
- Work done by teammates was crucial to the success of
the model
- Developed program to find ET at each pixel of a
calibrated image
- Good estimation for high-coverage crops
- Obtained values for almond ET within 8% of the Penman-
Monteith potential
- Almonds are not stressed, perhaps overwatering
- Unmixing
- Crop coefficients
- Irrigation strategies
- Detectability of METRIC
- Shawn Kefauver, Susan Ustin, the ET group
- Rick Shetter and NSERC
- NASA Airborne Science Program
- DC8 Crew
Allen, R. G., Tasumi, M., and Trezza, R. (2007). “Satellite-Based Energy Balance for Mapping
Evapotranspiration with Internalized Calibration (METRIC) – Model.” J. Irrig. Drain. Eng.,
ASCE, 380-394.
Allen, R. G., Pereira, L. S., Raes, D., and Smith, M. (1998). “Crop evapotranspiration: Guidelines
for computing crop water requirements.” United Nations FAO, Irrigation and Drainage, N.Y.,
Paper No. 56. <http://www.fao.org/docrep/X0490E/X0490E00.htm> (July 12, 2010).
Allen, R. G., et al. (2009). “An intercomparison of three remote sensing-based surface energy
balance algorithms over a corn and soybean production region (Iowa, U.S.) during
SMACEX.” Agriculture and Forest Meteorology, (149). 2082-2097.
Allen, R. G., et al. (1996). Chap. 4 “Evaporation and transpiration.” ASCE handbook of hydrology,
ASCE, New York, NY., 125–252.
Venkatram, A. (1980). “Estimating the Monin-Obukhov Length in the Stable Boundary Layer
for Dispersion Calculations.” Boundary-Layer Meteorology, (19). 481-485.
- Difference of all outgoing radiation from all incoming radiation
- Shortwave radiation
- SW = 0.4-1 μm range
- Albedo
- Bare Soil: 0.17
- Coniferous forest: 0.08
- Snow: 0.87
- Longwave (terrestrial) radiation
- Emissivity
- Solar radiation: shortwave (SW) radiation from the sun
- Principal source of energy for ET
- SW = 0.4-1 μm range