Use of Sensor Imagery Data for Surface Boundary Conditions in Regional Climate Modeling

Mesoscale climate and hydrology modeling studies have increased in sophistication and are being run at increasingly higher resolutions. Data resolution sufficiently finer than that of the computational model is required not only to support sophisticated linkages and process interactions at small sca...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hyun Il Choi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2011-06-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
RCM
SBC
GIS
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/11/7/6728/
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spelling doaj-f40a53e806ab4de596ff1a92859520902020-11-25T00:25:19ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202011-06-011176728674210.3390/s110706728Use of Sensor Imagery Data for Surface Boundary Conditions in Regional Climate ModelingHyun Il ChoiMesoscale climate and hydrology modeling studies have increased in sophistication and are being run at increasingly higher resolutions. Data resolution sufficiently finer than that of the computational model is required not only to support sophisticated linkages and process interactions at small scales but to assess their cumulative impact at larger scales. The global distributions at fine spatial and temporal scales can be described by means of various senor imagery data collected through remote sensing techniques, sensor image and photo programs, scanning and digitizing skills for existing maps, etc. The availability of global sensor imagery maps facilitates assimilation in land surface models to account for terrestrial dynamics. This study focuses on the use of global imagery data for development and construction of surface boundary conditions (SBCs) specifically designed for mesoscale regional climate model (RCM) applications. The several SBCs are currently presented in a RCM domain for the continent of Asia at 30-km spacing by using sensor imagery data. Geographic Information System (GIS) software application tools are mainly used to convert data information from various raw data onto RCM-specific grids. The raw data sources and processing procedures are elaborated in detail, by which the SBCs can be readily constructed for any specific RCM domain anywhere in the world.http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/11/7/6728/sensor imageryRCMSBCGIS
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hyun Il Choi
spellingShingle Hyun Il Choi
Use of Sensor Imagery Data for Surface Boundary Conditions in Regional Climate Modeling
Sensors
sensor imagery
RCM
SBC
GIS
author_facet Hyun Il Choi
author_sort Hyun Il Choi
title Use of Sensor Imagery Data for Surface Boundary Conditions in Regional Climate Modeling
title_short Use of Sensor Imagery Data for Surface Boundary Conditions in Regional Climate Modeling
title_full Use of Sensor Imagery Data for Surface Boundary Conditions in Regional Climate Modeling
title_fullStr Use of Sensor Imagery Data for Surface Boundary Conditions in Regional Climate Modeling
title_full_unstemmed Use of Sensor Imagery Data for Surface Boundary Conditions in Regional Climate Modeling
title_sort use of sensor imagery data for surface boundary conditions in regional climate modeling
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2011-06-01
description Mesoscale climate and hydrology modeling studies have increased in sophistication and are being run at increasingly higher resolutions. Data resolution sufficiently finer than that of the computational model is required not only to support sophisticated linkages and process interactions at small scales but to assess their cumulative impact at larger scales. The global distributions at fine spatial and temporal scales can be described by means of various senor imagery data collected through remote sensing techniques, sensor image and photo programs, scanning and digitizing skills for existing maps, etc. The availability of global sensor imagery maps facilitates assimilation in land surface models to account for terrestrial dynamics. This study focuses on the use of global imagery data for development and construction of surface boundary conditions (SBCs) specifically designed for mesoscale regional climate model (RCM) applications. The several SBCs are currently presented in a RCM domain for the continent of Asia at 30-km spacing by using sensor imagery data. Geographic Information System (GIS) software application tools are mainly used to convert data information from various raw data onto RCM-specific grids. The raw data sources and processing procedures are elaborated in detail, by which the SBCs can be readily constructed for any specific RCM domain anywhere in the world.
topic sensor imagery
RCM
SBC
GIS
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/11/7/6728/
work_keys_str_mv AT hyunilchoi useofsensorimagerydataforsurfaceboundaryconditionsinregionalclimatemodeling
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