Paper
19 March 2013 Measurement of surface albedo and its environmental effects over a temperate desert steppe
Fulin Yang, Jing Zhou
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 8762, PIAGENG 2013: Intelligent Information, Control, and Communication Technology for Agricultural Engineering; 87621C (2013) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2020167
Event: Third International Conference on Photonics and Image in Agriculture Engineering (PIAGENG 2013), 2013, Sanya, China
Abstract
The albedo is an important factor of the earth's climate system, and also is a key input parameter of the regional climate models. Diurnal and seasonal characteristics of surface albedo in the temperate desert steppe were investigated during the 2008 growing season. The results showed that the diurnal dynamics of surface albedo was affected by the solar altitude, and took U-shaped with higher just after sunrise, before sunset and lower in the midday. Average surface albedo was 0.25 during the growing season, ranging from 0.20 to 0.34. Seasonal surface albedo showed higher in May, decreased in June, kept relatively stable from July to September, and increased in October. This variation was related to the phenology of the grassland canopy. Leaf area index and soil water content were the primary factors of surface albedo.
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Fulin Yang and Jing Zhou "Measurement of surface albedo and its environmental effects over a temperate desert steppe", Proc. SPIE 8762, PIAGENG 2013: Intelligent Information, Control, and Communication Technology for Agricultural Engineering, 87621C (19 March 2013); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2020167
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KEYWORDS
Vegetation

Climatology

Ecosystems

Soil science

Climate change

Environmental sensing

Meteorology

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