2014
DOI: 10.5194/hess-18-1165-2014
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Intercomparison of four remote-sensing-based energy balance methods to retrieve surface evapotranspiration and water stress of irrigated fields in semi-arid climate

Abstract: Abstract. Instantaneous evapotranspiration rates and surface water stress levels can be deduced from remotely sensed surface temperature data through the surface energy budget. Two families of methods can be defined: the contextual methods, where stress levels are scaled on a given image between hot/dry and cool/wet pixels for a particular vegetation cover, and single-pixel methods, which evaluate latent heat as the residual of the surface energy balance for one pixel independently from the others. Four models… Show more

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Cited by 97 publications
(66 citation statements)
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“…Information on the magnitude of evapotranspiration (ET) from land surfaces, along with its variability in space and time, is essential for effectively managing water resources in agricultural systems (Anderson et al 2011; Bastiaanssen et al 2005; Cammalleri et al 2014; Carlson 2007; Chirouze et al 2014; Cleugh et al 2007; Jiang and Islam 2001; Kustas et al 2012; McMahon et al 2013; Morillas et al 2013; Tang et al 2011). However, the regional quantification of ET remains difficult, in particular when spatially distributed information with high resolution is sought.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Information on the magnitude of evapotranspiration (ET) from land surfaces, along with its variability in space and time, is essential for effectively managing water resources in agricultural systems (Anderson et al 2011; Bastiaanssen et al 2005; Cammalleri et al 2014; Carlson 2007; Chirouze et al 2014; Cleugh et al 2007; Jiang and Islam 2001; Kustas et al 2012; McMahon et al 2013; Morillas et al 2013; Tang et al 2011). However, the regional quantification of ET remains difficult, in particular when spatially distributed information with high resolution is sought.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One way of classifying approaches for the estimation of ET from remotely sensed TIR imagery is to divide them into two groups, contextual and single-pixel methods (Chirouze et al 2014). Contextual methods make use of the heterogeneity within an LST image and use the information of the whole image for the estimation of ET at each single pixel.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This assumption is not critical at the daily time step on homogeneous bare soil and short crops [46,47]. Daily latent heat fluxes were divided by the latent heat of vaporization to obtain evapotranspiration in mm·day −1 (more details can be found in [48]). Soil moisture was measured every 30 min by water content reflectometers (CS616 probes, Campbell Scientific Inc., Logan, UT, USA), which were set up within soil pits at 5-and 30-cm depths.…”
Section: Experimental Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…TSEB appears to provide good ET estimates and to be less sensitive to roughness length parameters [22]. One expects flux conservation between HR and LR.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%