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On the theory relating changes in area-average and pan evaporation

Date

2009

Authors

Shuttleworth, W James
Serrat-Capdevila, Aleix
Roderick, Michael
Scott, Russell L

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley Interscience

Abstract

Theory relating changes in area-average evaporation with changes in the evaporation from pans or open water is developed. Such changes can arise by Type (a) processes related to large-scale changes in atmospheric concentrations and circulation that modify surface evaporation rates in the same direction, and Type (b) processes related to coupling between the surface and atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) at the landscape scale that usually modify area-average evaporation and pan evaporation in different directions. The interrelationship between evaporation rates in response to Type (a) changes is derived. They have the same sign and broadly similar magnitude but the change in area-average evaporation is modified by surface resistance. As an alternative to assuming the complementary evaporation hypothesis, the results of previous modelling studies that investigated surface-atmosphere coupling are parametrized and used to develop a theoretical description of Type (b) coupling via vapour pressure deficit (VPD) in the ABL. The interrelationship between appropriately normalized pan and area-average evaporation rates is shown to vary with temperature and wind speed but, on average, the Type (b) changes are approximately equal and opposite. Long-term Australian pan evaporation data are analyzed to demonstrate the simultaneous presence of Type (a) and (b) processes, and observations from three field sites in southwestern USA show support for the theory describing Type (b) coupling via VPD.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: Atmospheric boundary layers; Atmospheric concentration; Complementary evaporation; Evaporation rate; Global dimming; Landscape scale; Modelling studies; Modify surface; Open water; Pan evaporation; Vapour pressures; Wind speed; Climate change; Conductive Climate change; Complementary evaporation; Evaporation paradox; Global dimming

Citation

Source

Royal Meteorological Society. Quarterly Journal

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

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2037-12-31
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