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ECOSTRESS: NASA's next generation mission to measure evapotranspiration from the international space station
Fecha
2020-04-06Autor
Fisher, Joshua B.
Lee, Brian
Purdy, Adam J.
Halverson, Gregory H.
Dohlen, Matthew R.
Cawse-Nicholson, Kerry
Wang, Audrey
Anderson, Ray G.
Aragon, Bruno
Altaf Arain, M.
Baldocchi, Dennis
Baker, John M.
Barral, Helene
Bernacchi, Carl J.
Bernhofer, Christian
Biraud, Sebastien C.
Bohrer, Gil
Brunsell, Nathaniel
Cappelaere, Bernard
Castro - Contreras, Saulo
Chun, Junghwa
Conrad, Bryan J.
Cremonese, Edoardo
Demarty, Jerome
Desai, Ankur R.
De Ligne, Anne
Foltynova, Lenka
Goulden, Michael
Griffis, Timothy J.
Grunwald, Thomas
Johnson, Mark S.
Kang, Minseok
Kelbe, Dave
Kowalska, Natalia
Jong - Hwan, Lim
Mainassara, Ibrahim
McCabe, Matthew F.
Missik, Justine E.C.
Mohanty, Binayak P.
Moore, Caitlin E.
Morillas, Laura
Morrison, Ross
Munger, J. Willians
Posse Beaulieu, Gabriela
Richardson, Andrew D.
Russell, Eric S.
Ryu, Youngryel
Sanchez - Azofeifa, Arturo
Schmidt, Marius
Schwartz, Efrat
Sharp, Iain
Sigut, Ladislav
Tang, Yao
Hulley, Glynn
Anderson, Martha
Hain, Christopher
French, Andrew
Wood, Eric
Hook, Simón
Resumen
The ECOsystem Space Thermal Radiometer Experiment on the Space Station (ECOSTRESS) was launched to the International Space Station on June 29, 2018 by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The primary scientific focus of ECOSTRESS is on evapotranspiration (ET), which occurs as Level 3 (L3) latent heat flux (LE) data products. This data is generated from the Level 2 Earth Surface Temperature and Emissivity Product (L2_LSTE), along with the atmospheric and ancillary surface data. Here, we provide the first validation (Stage 1, preliminary) of the global product ECOSTRESS clear - sky ET (L3_ET_PT - JPL, Version 6.0) against LE measurements at 82 eddy covariance sites around the world. Overall, the ECOSTRESS ET product performs well against site measurements (instant clear sky / flyover time: r 2 = 0.88; overall bias = 8%; normalized root mean square error, RMSE = 6%) . ET uncertainty was generally constant across climate zones, biome types, and times of day (ECOSTRESS samples the diurnal cycle), although temperate sites are over-represented. ECOSTRESS 70 m high spatial resolution improved correlations by 85% and RMSE by 62%, relative to 1 km pixels. This document serves as a reference for the accuracy of ECOSTRESS L3 ET and the Stage 1 validation status for subsequent science that continues to use this data.