Not exact matches
This company's specialized sensor system provides farmers with
data tracking
evapotranspiration to guide irrigation decisions.
Researchers used two methods to track groundwater levels, traditional water balance estimates — which take into account surface water inflow like rainfall and snow melt, soil moisture capacity and
evapotranspiration — and
data from NASA's twin satellite system called GRACE (Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment).
The researchers produced a long - term global satellite record of land
evapotranspiration using remote sensing satellite
data.
In addition to global
evapotranspiration trends, they examined vegetation greenness and general climate
data including temperature, precipitation and cloudiness.
To do so, Ichoku and his colleagues used satellite records from 2001 to 2014 — including
data from NASA's Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer and the Tropical Rainfall Measurement Mission — to analyze the impact of fires on various water cycle indicators, namely soil moisture, precipitation,
evapotranspiration and vegetation greenness.
Although
data are not complete, and sometimes contradictory, the weight of evidence from past studies shows on a global scale that precipitation, runoff, atmospheric water vapor, soil moisture,
evapotranspiration, growing season length, and wintertime mountain glacier mass are all increasing.
The simulated
data includes snow water equivalent, soil moisture, surface runoff (runoff), subsurface runoff (baseflow), and actual
evapotranspiration for a region covering the Peace, upper Columbia, Fraser and Campbell River watersheds.
Six Chinese scientists used remotely - sensed imaging
data, including leaf area index (LAI), normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI), an enhanced vegetation index (EVI), gross primary production (GPP) and net primary production (NPP), coupled with other
data (temperature, soil moisture,
evapotranspiration, albedo and wind) over the period 2003 to 2014 to analyze the effects of a wind farm on summer vegetative growth in a region of northern China.
Furthermore the employed SM
data and the Standardized Precipitation Index (SPI) are only weakly correlated in the investigated regions, highlighting the importance of
evapotranspiration and runoff for resulting SM.
The team examined
data on carbon - dioxide flux,
evapotranspiration, sensible heat, air temperature, net radiation and photosynthetic active radiation from five FLUXNET grassland sites in Canada, the US and Hungary, along with leaf - area index information derived from satellite
data.