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Improving Land Surface Products from Multiple EOS Sensors by Developing a Prototype Data Assimilation System
Principal Investigators:
Shunlin Liang, John Townshend, Robert Dickinson (Georgia Institute of Technology)
After a decade of efforts by instrument science teams, many land products are now being produced systematically from data of NASA EOS. However, use of multiple EOS instruments to create land products has scarcely started, despite the existence of highly complementary instruments and the EOS program goal to support an integrated science program. There is an urgent need to develop more advanced new inversion methods and produce more accurate products. The products must also be optimized for specific applications such as climate models.
We are reformulating the analysis of EOS data in this project by
developing a prototype data assimilation system to generate an improved
suite of land products from multiple EOS data sets. The products include
land surface broadband albedos, leaf area index, temperature, and
spectral emissivities. It will also generate new products, such as
new broadband albedos, incident radiation, broadband emissivities,
and shortwave and longwave net radiation. The general idea is to use
the surface and atmospheric radiation models with parameters that
are adjusted to optimally reproduce the spectral radiance received
by the EOS sensors. Such adjustments are usually made by identifying
reasonably close "first guesses" for the model parameters
and determining statistically optimum estimates of the parameters
by giving appropriate weights to the first guesses versus addition
to the error increments needed to get agreement with the observations.
The first guesses are the 3-6 years land product climatologies of
EOS products. The best estimate at the present time is a climatological
value corrected by some combinations of previous time's departure
from climatology weighted using temporal autocorrelation and what
it takes to fit present observations.
The improved EOS products and the new products will be validated through
an extensive validation plan. These products will be tested and assessed
by the NCAR Climate Land Model in conjunction with Dr. Dickinson's
EOS IDS project for characterizing the impacts of land use change
on surface hydrological processes in climate models. They will be
generated and distributed through UMD GLCF.
For more information contact Shunlin Liang.
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Department of Geography, 2181 LeFrak Hall, University of Maryland, College Park MD
20742 Phone: 01-301-405-4050 Fax: 01-301-0314-9299 © 2006, All Rights Reserved |
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