| Literature DB >> 31945081 |
William L Crosson1, Mohammad Z Al-Hamdan1, Tabassum Z Insaf2.
Abstract
We have developed and applied a relatively simple disaggregation scheme that uses spatial patterns of Land Surface Temperature (LST) from MODIS warm-season composites to improve the spatial characterization of daily maximum and minimum air temperatures. This down-scaling model produces qualitatively reasonable 1 km daily maximum and minimum air temperature estimates that reflect urban and coastal features. In a 5-city validation, the model was shown to provide improved daily maximum air temperature estimates in the three coastal cities, compared to 12 km NLDAS-2 (North American Land Data Assimilation System). Down-scaled maximum temperature estimates for the other two (non-coastal) cities were marginally worse than the original NLDAS-2 temperatures. For daily minimum temperatures, the scheme produces spatial fields that qualitatively capture geographic features, but quantitative validation shows the down-scaling model performance to be very similar to the original NLDAS-2 minimum temperatures. Thus, we limit the discussion in this paper to daily maximum temperatures. Overall, errors in the down-scaled maximum air temperatures are comparable to errors in down-scaled LST obtained in previous studies. The advantage of this approach is that it produces estimates of daily maximum air temperatures, which is more relevant than LST in applications such as public health. The resulting 1 km daily maximum air temperatures have great potential utility for applications such as public health, energy demand, and surface energy balance analyses. The method may not perform as well in conditions of strong temperature advection. Application of the model also may be problematic in areas having extreme changes in elevation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31945081 PMCID: PMC6964900 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227480
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1MODIS LST departures for the St. Louis, MO area for May-September 2009 for daily maximum temperatures.
City centers are indicated by green circles.
Fig 2Daily maximum temperature estimates for the Washington-Baltimore region, 12 July 2009.
Left: 12 km NLDAS-2. Right: 1 km down-scaled estimates. City centers are indicated by green circles.
Fig 3Daily maximum temperature estimates for the Tampa Bay, Florida region, 12 July 2009.
Left: 12 km NLDAS-2. Right: 1 km down-scaled estimates. City centers are indicated by green circles.
Daily maximum temperature validation statistics for five cities, averaged over June-August of 2009–2011 (n = 276 for each city).
Bold text indicates the superior performance for each city and each metric.
| City | Mean Difference (deg. C) | RMSD (deg. C) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NLDAS-2 | Down-scaled | NLDAS-2 | Down-scaled | |
| Atlanta, GA | 1.09 | 2.05 | ||
| San Francisco, CA | -3.69 | 4.44 | ||
| Washington, DC | -0.53 | 1.52 | ||
| Baltimore, MD | -1.11 | 1.96 | ||
| St. Louis, MO | 1.45 | 2.38 | ||
| 5-city Mean | -0.95 | 2.35 | ||