Soil Hydrology Model

Objectives

Regional-scale atmospheric models require the initialization of soil water (SW) content over the model domain. Routine SW measurements over an extended area are unfeasible. As a result, climatological estimates of soil moisture have often been used to provide initial conditions for the models. Unfortunately, this approach may result in large errors during periods of excessive rainfall or drought. In the absence of observations, an indirect method is needed to determine SW fields from routine meteorological observations. This need is being met for SRBEX by the development of the Penn State Soil Hydrology Model (SHM).

Current Activities

The SHM, developed by Bill Capehart and Toby Carlson (Capehart and Carlson, 1994), uses a one-dimensional soil-water diffusion and gravitation scheme to determine the temporal evolution of the SW as a function of depth. The model includes three modules: precipitation, evapotranspiration, and sub-surface diffusion-gravitation. The precipitation processes include leaf interception, infiltration, ponding, and surface runoff. Evapotranspiration is modeled following a Penman-type equation. The subsurface portion of the SHM follows the Darcy's law description of SW movement. The SHM is driven by routine meteorological observations at the surface (i.e., the atmospheric forcing: air temperature, moisture, and wind speed, as well as rainfall and cloud cover), and conventional topographic information, surface-cover parameters (vegetation type, vegetation fraction), and soils information (soil texture). The soil column depth, vertical grid spacing and the nature of the lower boundary (impermeable, permeable or saturated barrier) in the model are specified by the user.

The SHM is initialized with an arbitrary SW profile, usually chosen to be 50% of saturation. The model, driven by the atmospheric forcing, converges toward a common solution regardless of the chosen initial SW value. This convergence takes place over a balancing period that may range from several weeks to a few months, depending mostly upon the precipitation amounts.

To provide the three-dimensional SW fields needed for initialization of the mesoscale atmospheric model (MM5) used by SRBEX, the one-dimensional SHM must be run at each grid point of the MM5 domain. Some of the MM5 pre-processing modules (those which grid land surface properties data and objectively analyze meteorologoical observations) have been adapted to generate the atmospheric forcing and surface properties data for each grid point, and then pass them to a driver program which runs the SHM at each point(Smith et al., 1994). This publication also describes the linkage between the SHM system and the MM5.

We are currently developing a real-time version of the SHM which will provide updated SW fields to the real-time MM5 (Lakhtakia et al., 1994). Testing of this linkage will include comparison of MM5-simulated afternoon temperature and specific humidity close to the ground with actual observations.

To facilitate the study of rapid drying of the surface soil layer, to which remote sensing instruments appear to be most sensitive, the SHM is also being modified to accept vertical grid resolutions of less than 1 cm.

Results

The recent publication of high spatial resolution soils and landcover databases for the 48 conterminous United States has permitted running the SHM system with significantly more realistic surface characteristics data for the parts of the MM5 domain within the 48 states. The resulting simulated SW fields appear to fit actual measurements more closely than the simulated values obtained using older, less accurate soils and landcover data (Lakhtakia and Miller, 1995).

A 5-minute video has been prepared which shows the time evolution of the SHM-generated SW fields over the SRBEX domain for the specific application described by Smith et al. (1994). A copy is available for loan from M. N. Lakhtakia, lakht@essc.psu.edu.


Last change: 10 May 1995, R. A. White / raw@essc.psu.edu