Relative humidity gradients as a key constraint on terrestrial water and energy fluxes
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Published:2021-09-24
Issue:9
Volume:25
Page:5175-5191
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Kim YeonukORCID, Garcia MonicaORCID, Morillas Laura, Weber UlrichORCID, Black T. AndrewORCID, Johnson Mark S.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Earth's climate and water cycle are highly dependent on
terrestrial evapotranspiration and the associated flux of latent heat.
Although it has been hypothesized for over 50 years that land dryness
becomes embedded in atmospheric conditions through evaporation, underlying
physical mechanisms for this land–atmosphere coupling remain elusive. Here,
we use a novel physically based evaporation model to demonstrate that
near-surface atmospheric relative humidity (RH) fundamentally coevolves with
RH at the land surface. The new model expresses the latent heat flux as a
combination of thermodynamic processes in the atmospheric surface layer. Our
approach is similar to the Penman–Monteith equation but uses only routinely
measured abiotic variables, avoiding the need to parameterize surface
resistance. We applied our new model to 212 in situ eddy covariance sites
around the globe and to the FLUXCOM global-scale evaporation product to
partition observed evaporation into diabatic vs. adiabatic thermodynamic
processes. Vertical RH gradients were widely observed to be near zero on daily
to yearly timescales for local as well as global scales, implying an
emergent land–atmosphere equilibrium. This equilibrium allows for accurate
evaporation estimates using only the atmospheric state and radiative energy,
regardless of land surface conditions and vegetation controls. Our results
also demonstrate that the latent heat portion of available energy (i.e.,
evaporative fraction) at local scales is mainly controlled by the vertical
RH gradient. By demonstrating how land surface conditions become encoded in
the atmospheric state, this study will improve our fundamental understanding
of Earth's climate and the terrestrial water cycle.
Funder
Joint Programming Initiative Water challenges for a changing world
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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