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Journal ArticleDOI

The radiation balance of bare soil and vegetation

John L. Monteith, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1961 - 
- Vol. 87, Iss: 372, pp 159-170
TLDR
In this article, the authors measured short-wave radiation S, reflected shortwave radiation α S and net radiation R were measured over bare soil and crops from 1957 to 1959, and deduced from the observed linear dependence of R on S in the absence of cloud.
Abstract
Incoming short-wave radiation S, reflected short-wave radiation α S and net radiation R were measured over bare soil and crops from 1957 to 1959, and net long-wave radiation (L) was deduced from For grass, α increased from 0·23 at solar elevation 60° to 0·28 at 20° with daily mean 0·26. For bare soil, the corresponding increase was from 0·16 to 0·19 with mean 0·17. In mid-June, L for bare soil decreased from – 0·1 cal cm−2 min−1 during the night to – 0·4 cal cm−2 min−1 in the early afternoon. For long grass, in August, the corresponding change was from – 0·05 to – 0·22 cal cm−2 min−1. Under clear skies the incoming long-wave component varied much less than the outgoing component, and net flux L was closely related to surface temperature. With a heating coefficient β = – dL/dR, the observed linear dependence of R on S in the absence of cloud may be expressed as Where, formally, R = L0 when S = 0. For grass, sugar beet and potatoes, β lay between 0·15 and 0·22 with a variation which may depend on wind speed rather than on crop. The value for dry bare soil was higher (0·41) because there was greater surface heating. Measurements under clear skies and over grass at Cambridge and Kew agree well with Rothamsted values (β = 0·22, L0 = – 5·9 cal cm−2 hr−1). Over Nebraska prairie, β = 0·25, L0 = – 4·5 cal cm−2 hr−1 from selected observations during Projects Great Plains and Prairie grass.

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Weather in wheat : An essay in micro-meteorology

TL;DR: In this paper, Long et al. used continuous recorders to measure temperature, humidity and wind in and above the wheat crop at levels up to about 2 m. The results showed that the anomalies in profiles are attributed to periodicities in the air parameters almost identical with that of the recording instruments, and partly to long-persisting differences in temperature and humidity at constant level across the site.
Journal ArticleDOI

The reflection of short‐wave radiation by vegetation

TL;DR: The fraction of short-wave radiation reflected from agricultural crops was measured from May till September 1958 using two portable solarimetric thermopiles as mentioned in this paper, and the maximum reflection coefficients for grass, lucerne, potatoes, sugar beet, and spring wheat were between 0·25 and 0·27.
Journal ArticleDOI

An empirical method for estimating long-wave radiation exchanges in the British Isles

TL;DR: From radiation measurements at Kew Observatory (tabulated by Lonnqvist), the effective emissivity of the atmosphere e, defined as the ratio of incoming long-wave radiation to black-body radiation at screen temperature, can be related to optical path m (cm) by as mentioned in this paper.