Data assimilation of satellite-based actual evapotranspiration in a distributed hydrological model of a controlled water system

被引:26
|
作者
Hartanto, I. M. [1 ]
van der Kwast, J. [1 ]
Alexandridis, T. K. [2 ]
Almeida, W. [3 ]
Song, Y. [1 ]
van Andel, S. J. [1 ]
Solomatine, D. P. [1 ,4 ]
机构
[1] UNESCO IHE Inst Water Educ, Delft, Netherlands
[2] Aristotle Univ Thessaloniki, Lab Remote Sensing & GIS, Thessaloniki, Greece
[3] Natl Inst Space Res, CPTEC INPE Ctr Weather Forecast & Climate Anal, Sao Jose Dos Campos, SP, Brazil
[4] Delft Univ Technol, Water Resources Sect, Delft, Netherlands
关键词
Hydrology Data assimilation; Particle filter; Evapotranspiration Controlled water system; Earth observation; SOIL-MOISTURE DATA; SEQUENTIAL ASSIMILATION; PARTICLE FILTER; IMPLEMENTATION; INFORMATION; SIMULATION; STREAMFLOW; TRACKING;
D O I
10.1016/j.jag.2016.12.015
中图分类号
TP7 [遥感技术];
学科分类号
081102 ; 0816 ; 081602 ; 083002 ; 1404 ;
摘要
Advances in earth observation (EC) and spatially distributed hydrological modelling provide an opportunity to improve modelling of controlled water systems. In a controlled water system human interference is high, which may lead to incorrect parameterisation in the model calibration phase. This paper analyses whether assimilation of EO actual evapotranspiration (ETa) data can improve discharge simulation with a spatially distributed hydrological model of a controlled water system. The EO ETa estimates are in the form of eight-day ETa composite maps derived from Terra/MODIS images using the ITA-MyWater algorithm. This algorithm is based on the surface energy balance method and is calibrated for this research for a low-lying reclamation area with a heavily controlled water system: the Rijnland area in the Netherlands. Data assimilation (DA) with the particle filter method is applied to assimilate the ETa maps into a spatially distributed hydrological model. The hydrological model and DA framework are applied using the open source software SIMGRO and PCRaster-Python respectively. The analysis is done for a period between July and October 2013 in which a high discharge peak followed a long dry-spell. The assimilation of EC ETa resulted in local differences in modelled ETa compared to simulation without data assimilation, while the area average ETa remained almost the same. The modelled cumulative discharge graphs, with and without DA, showed distinctive differences with the simulation, with DA better matching the measured cumulative discharge. The bias of simulated cumulative discharge to the observed data reduced from 14% to 4% when using DA of EO ETa. These results showed that assimilating EO ETa may not only be effective in the more common applications of soil moisture and crop-growth modelling, but also for improving discharge modelling of controlled water systems. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:123 / 135
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Satellite-based reconstruction and spatiotemporal variability analysis of actual evapotranspiration in the Jinshajiang River basin, China
    Zhang K.
    Ju Y.
    Li Z.
    Shuikexue Jinzhan/Advances in Water Science, 2021, 32 (02): : 182 - 191
  • [32] Assessing interannual variability of evapotranspiration at the catchment scale using satellite-based evapotranspiration data sets
    Cheng, Lei
    Xu, Zongxue
    Wang, Dingbao
    Cai, Ximing
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2011, 47
  • [33] Provision of snow water equivalent from satellite data and the hydrological model PROMET using data assimilation techniques
    Appel, Florian
    Bach, Heike
    Ohl, Natalie
    Mauser, Wolfram
    IGARSS: 2007 IEEE INTERNATIONAL GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING SYMPOSIUM, VOLS 1-12: SENSING AND UNDERSTANDING OUR PLANET, 2007, : 4209 - +
  • [34] Calibration and evaluation of a flood forecasting system: Utility of numerical weather prediction model, data assimilation and satellite-based rainfall
    Yucel, I.
    Onen, A.
    Yilmaz, K. K.
    Gochis, D. J.
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2015, 523 : 49 - 66
  • [35] Assessing the accuracy of OpenET satellite-based evapotranspiration data to support water resource and land management applications
    John M. Volk
    Justin L. Huntington
    Forrest S. Melton
    Richard Allen
    Martha Anderson
    Joshua B. Fisher
    Ayse Kilic
    Anderson Ruhoff
    Gabriel B. Senay
    Blake Minor
    Charles Morton
    Thomas Ott
    Lee Johnson
    Bruno Comini de Andrade
    Will Carrara
    Conor T. Doherty
    Christian Dunkerly
    MacKenzie Friedrichs
    Alberto Guzman
    Christopher Hain
    Gregory Halverson
    Yanghui Kang
    Kyle Knipper
    Leonardo Laipelt
    Samuel Ortega-Salazar
    Christopher Pearson
    Gabriel E. L. Parrish
    Adam Purdy
    Peter ReVelle
    Tianxin Wang
    Yun Yang
    Nature Water, 2024, 2 (2): : 193 - 205
  • [36] Annual and seasonal trends in actual evapotranspiration over different meteorological sub-divisions in India using satellite-based data
    Kantha Rao Raghavendra Prasad K
    G. K. Bhimala
    Himesh Patra
    Sheshakumar S
    Theoretical and Applied Climatology, 2023, 152 : 999 - 1017
  • [37] Annual and seasonal trends in actual evapotranspiration over different meteorological sub-divisions in India using satellite-based data
    Prasad, Raghavendra K.
    Bhimala, Kantha Rao
    Patra, G. K.
    Himesh, S.
    Goroshi, Sheshakumar
    THEORETICAL AND APPLIED CLIMATOLOGY, 2023, 152 (3-4) : 999 - 1017
  • [38] Analysis and Assimilation of Microsized Satellite-based Data in Tropical Cyclone Monitoring
    He, Jieying
    Zhu, Xinguo
    Zhang, Shengwei
    2019 PHOTONICS & ELECTROMAGNETICS RESEARCH SYMPOSIUM - FALL (PIERS - FALL), 2019, : 2701 - 2704
  • [39] Satellite-based actual evapotranspiration estimation in the middle reach of the Heihe River Basin using the SEBAL method
    Li, Shoubo
    Zhao, Wenzhi
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2010, 24 (23) : 3337 - 3344
  • [40] Satellite-based energy balance for mapping evapotranspiration with internalized calibration (METRIC) - Model
    Allen, Richard G.
    Tasumi, Masahiro
    Trezza, Ricardo
    JOURNAL OF IRRIGATION AND DRAINAGE ENGINEERING, 2007, 133 (04) : 380 - 394