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Huang, Deng, & Wang, 2017

Paper/Book

Revisiting the global surface energy budgets with maximum-entropy-production model of surface heat fluxes

Huang, S.-Y., Y. Deng, and J. Wang (2017)
Climate Dynamics 49 (5-6): 1531-1545  

Abstract

The maximum-entropy-production (MEP) model of surface heat fluxes, based on contemporary non-equilibrium thermodynamics, information theory, and atmospheric turbulence theory, is used to re-estimate the global surface heat fluxes. The MEP model predicted surface fluxes automatically balance the surface energy budgets at all time and space scales without the explicit use of near-surface temperature and moisture gradient, wind speed and surface roughness data. The new MEP-based global annual mean fluxes over the land surface, using input data of surface radiation, temperature data from National Aeronautics and Space Administration–Clouds and the Earth’s Radiant Energy System (NASA CERES) supplemented by surface specific humidity data from the Modern-Era Retrospective Analysis for Research and Applications (MERRA), agree closely with previous estimates. The new estimate of ocean evaporation, not using the MERRA reanalysis data as model inputs, is lower than previous estimates, while the new estimate of ocean sensible heat flux is higher than previously reported. The MEP model also produces the first global map of ocean surface heat flux that is not available from existing global reanalysis products.

Citation

Huang, S.-Y., Y. Deng, and J. Wang (2017): Revisiting the global surface energy budgets with maximum-entropy-production model of surface heat fluxes. Climate Dynamics 49 (5-6): 1531-1545. DOI: 10.1007/s00382-016-3395-x

This Paper/Book acknowledges NSF CZO grant support.