Science of Remote Sensing (Jun 2024)

Benefit of incorporating GLASS remote sensing vegetation products in improving Noah-MP land surface temperature simulations on the Tibetan Plateau

  • Qing He,
  • Hui Lu,
  • Kun Yang,
  • Long Zhao,
  • Mijun Zou

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
p. 100115

Abstract

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Land Surface Temperature (LST) is important for diagnosing surface energy balance in land surface models (LSMs). However, LST simulation in current LSMs tends to show large cold biases, partially due to the reason that the model's prescribed vegetation parameters (e.g., Leaf Area Index (LAI) and Fraction of Vegetation Cover (FVC)) are misrepresented, especially in regions with complex topography and climate such as Tibetan Plateau. Recent advancements in remote sensing technologies provide a unique opportunity to improve the model's vegetation parameters at large scales. In this study, we practice two experiments to improve LST simulations in Noah-MP LSM by (1) incorporating LAI and FVC from the Global Land Surface Satellite (GLASS) remote sensing product (exp_RS); and (2) incorporating an empirical LAI and FVC parameterization scheme based on the soil temperature stress factor (exp_RL02). Results show that the effect of vegetation on simulated LST is the most significant in summer season when the model-satellite LAI and FVC differences are the largest. Compared to the default experiment that uses static LAI and FVC values from the model's look-up table (exp_CTL), the results in exp_RS and exp_RL02 show domain-wide improvement of the simulated LST. The LAI and FVC effect on LST are also well reflected in model's energy budget components (i.e., longwave emissivity, sensible and latent heat fluxes, etc). Validation of the model simulated soil temperature with in-situ observations further demonstrate the model improvements. Our study underscores the important role of vegetation in regulating surface energy transfer processes. Our study also highlights the feasibility and benefit of incorporating remote sensing data in improving land surface model simulations.

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