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Remote Sensing, Land Surface Modelling and Data Assimilation

Remote Sensing, Land Surface Modelling and Data Assimilation. Christoph Rüdiger, Jeffrey Walker The University of Melbourne Jetse Kalma The University of Newcastle Garry Willgoose The university of Leeds. Overview. Remote Sensing Data Assimilation Land Surface Modelling

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Remote Sensing, Land Surface Modelling and Data Assimilation

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  1. Remote Sensing, Land Surface Modelling and Data Assimilation Christoph Rüdiger, Jeffrey Walker The University of Melbourne Jetse Kalma The University of Newcastle Garry Willgoose The university of Leeds

  2. Overview • Remote Sensing • Data Assimilation • Land Surface Modelling • Combining the Options

  3. Remote Sensing

  4. Remote Sensing • Remote Sensing defined: • Measurement of energy reflections or emissions of different spectra from a distance • Modes of Remote Sensing in Hydrology: • Ground-based • air-borne • space-borne platforms

  5. Observed Wavelengths- Spectral Resolution - • Visual Band (~400nm – 700nm) • Infrared Band (~0.7μm – 1000μm) • Microwave Band (~1cm – 30cm) • Radio Band (>30cm) • Gravitational Measurements

  6. What Can Be Measured(some examples) • Subsurface • Surface soil moisture, soil temperature, gravitational effects • Surface • Vegetation cover, vegetation density, evapotranspiration, temperature, sea level, elevation, fires • Atmosphere • Cloud cover, aerosols, wind, temperature

  7. Remote Sensing- Spatial Resolution - Study Catchment

  8. Current Missions • Visual Band (~400nm – 700nm) • Modis, Landsat … • Infrared Band (~0.7μm – 1000μm) • Landsat, GOES • Microwave Band (~1cm – 30cm) • TRMM, AMSR-E • Radio Band (>30cm) • TRMM • Gravitational Measurements • Grace

  9. Limitations of Individual Bands • Atmospheric interference (infrared). • Radio interference (microwave). • Surface conditions, vegetation, cloud and aerosol effects (all). • Penetration depth (all). • Other effects? Rüdiger et al., in review

  10. Summary of Remote Sensing • Advantages: • Observation of large areas • Observations of remote areas • Large quantity of environmental states can be observed • Limitations: • Either low resolution or low rate of repeat overpasses • Influence of surface and atmospheric conditions have to be filtered • Average values of observed states, need for downscaling

  11. Data Assimilation

  12. Data Assimilation Defined Definition 1: using data to force a model ie. precipitation and evapotranspiration to force a LSM Analogy: passenger giving instructions to a blindfolded driver on the autostrada at peak hour

  13. Analogy 1 Initial state Update Update Update Update Update Update

  14. Data Assimilation Defined Definition 1: using data to force a model ie. precipitation and evapotranspiration to force a LSM Analogy: passenger giving instructions to a blindfolded driver on the autostrada at peak hour Definition 2: using state observations to make a correction to the forecast model state ie. surface soil moisture obs. to correct forecasts Analogy: driver can see through his blindfold for 1/10th second every 30 seconds

  15. Initial state Analogy 2 Avail. Info Avail. Info Forecast Forecast Avail. Info Forecast

  16. What is the Usefulness of Data Assimilation • Organises data (model acts as interpolator) • Complements data (fills in unobserved regions) • Supplments data (provides unobserved quantities) • Quality controls data • Calibrates data

  17. Some Methods of Data Assimilation • Direct Insertion • Statistical Correction • Optimal Interpolation (OI) • Variational over Space and Time (4DVAR) • Sequential Data Assimilation (eg. Kalman Filter)

  18. Window 1 Window 2 State Value Time Continuous or Sequential DA? • Continuous (ie. variational) • Regression schemes • Adjoint derivation • In general: • Minimisation of objective function

  19. State Value Time Continuous or Sequential DA? • Sequential (ie. Kalman filter) Predict: Observe: Correct:

  20. EKF EnKF Covariance Covariance State Value State Value Time Time Extended or Ensemble KF?

  21. DA as a Spatial Interpolator Soil Moisture Soil Moisture Houser et al., WRR 1998

  22. Summary of Data Assimilation • Advantages • Variational: • Computationally inexpensive • Does not need prior knowledge of system states or errors • No linearisation of model needed • Can obtain model sensitivity values • Sequential: • Update of states at every observation point • Model size depends on computer not mathematics • Advantage over variational schemes for distributed models

  23. Summary of Data Assimilation • Limitations • Variational: • Regression scheme can become unstable • Adjoint derivation can be a complex problem • Long-term forecasts become inaccurate • Sequential: • Models have to be linearised to certain extent • Can be computationally infeasible • Error estimates can cause problems

  24. Hydrological Modelling

  25. Hydrological Modelling • Different models available • Soil moisture models • Land surface models • Atmospheric models • Land surface – atmosphere models • General Circulation models • Different approaches for modelling: • Lumped • Distributed • Semi-distributed

  26. Difference between model approaches distributed semi-distributed or lumped

  27. Semi-distributed model Kalma et al., 1995

  28. Two Models Koster et al., 2000 Liang et al., 1998

  29. Importance of Land Surface States(soil moisture, soil temperature, snow) Drought monitoring Irrigation policies Flood prediction Weather forecasting

  30. Importance of Land Surface States(soil moisture, soil temperature, snow) • Early warning systems • Flood prediction – infiltration, snow melt • Socio-economic activities • Agriculture – yield forecasting, management (pesticides etc), sediment transport • Water management – irrigation • Policy planning • Drought relief • Global change • Weather and climate • Evapotranspiration – latent and sensible heat • Albedo

  31. Soil Moisture vs Sea Surface Temp • Knowledge of soil moisture has a greater impact on the predictability of summertime precipitation over land at mid-latitudes than Sea Surface Temperature (SST). Koster et al., JHM 2000

  32. (JJA) Importance of Soil Moisture Koster et al., JHM 2000

  33. Combining the Efforts

  34. R e m o t e S e n s i n g S a t e l l i t e S u r f a c e S o i l M o i s t u r e L o g g e r S o i l M o i s t u r e M o d e l f  (z) [ q , D ( ) , ( ) ]      s S o i l M o i s t u r e S e n s o r s The Situation

  35. The Problem With LSMs • Same forcing and initial conditions but different predictions of soil moisture! Houser et al., GEWEX NEWS 2001

  36. Why do we need improvement? Koster et al., JHM, 2000

  37. How Do We Measure Soil Moisture

  38. Case Study – Variational DAAssimilation of Streamflow and Surface Soil Moisture Observations

  39. Bayesian Regression Kuczera, 1982

  40. Results “Experiment 1” Discharge Soil Moisture

  41. Results “Experiment 1”

  42. Results “Experiment 2” Discharge Soil Moisture

  43. Results Experiment 2 cont’d Root Zone Soil Moisture Surface Soil Moisture

  44. Summary of Variational Approach • Retrieval of initial states possible to high accuracy. • Only few iterations necessary. • Limitations when additional errors are involved. • Long forecasting window will lead to less accurate results. • First estimate of initial states can be important

  45. Case Study – Sequential DAAssimilation of Surface Soil Moisture

  46. Direct Insertion Every Hour

  47. Kalman Filter Update Every Hour

  48. Effects of Extreme Events

  49. Single Observation Number of Observations • All observations

  50. Summary of Sequential DA • Require a statistical assimilation scheme (ie. a scheme which can potentially alter the entire profile). • Simulation results may be degraded slightly if simulation and observation values are already close. • The updating interval is relatively unimportant when using a calibrated model with accurate forcing.

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