CNCS Center for Nonlinear and Complex Systems
   Search Help Login pdf version printable version

Publications [#281756] of Gabriel G. Katul

Papers Published

  1. Katul, GG; Porporato, A; Daly, E; Oishi, AC; Kim, H-S; Stoy, PC; Juang, J-Y; Siqueira, MB, On the spectrum of soil moisture from hourly to interannual scales, Water Resources Research, vol. 43 no. 5 (2007), American Geophysical Union (AGU), ISSN 0043-1397 [doi]
    (last updated on 2023/06/01)

    Abstract:
    {[}1] The spectrum of soil moisture content at scales ranging from 1 hour to 8 years is analyzed for a site whose hydrologic balance is primarily governed by precipitation (p), and evapotranspiration (ET). The site is a uniformly planted loblolly pine stand situated in the southeastern United States and is characterized by a shallow rooting depth (R-L) and a near-impervious clay pan just below R-L. In this setup, when ET linearly increases with increasing root zone soil moisture content (theta), an analytical model can be derived for the soil moisture content energy spectrum (E-s( f), where f is frequency) that predicts the soil moisture ``memory'' ( taken as the integral timescale) as beta(-1)(1) approximate to eta R-L/ETmax, where ETmax is the maximum measured hourly ET and h is the soil porosity. The spectral model suggests that E-s(f) decays at f(-2-alpha) at high f but almost white (i.e., f(0)) at low f, where alpha is the power law exponent of the rainfall spectrum at high f (alpha approximate to 0.75 for this site). The rapid E-s( f) decay at high f makes the soil moisture variance highly imbalanced in the Fourier domain, thereby permitting much of the soil moisture variability to be described by a limited number of Fourier modes. For the 8-year data collected here, 99.6\% of the soil moisture variance could be described by less than 0.4\% of its Fourier modes. A practical outcome of this energy imbalance in the frequency domain is that the diurnal cycle in ET can be ignored if beta(-1)(1) ( estimated at 7.6 days from the model) is much larger than 12 hours. The model, however, underestimates the measured E-s(f) at very low frequencies (f