首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     

2001-2010年中国地表比辐射率的时空变化(英文)
引用本文:王新生,樊江文,徐静,柳菲,高守杰,魏新彩. 2001-2010年中国地表比辐射率的时空变化(英文)[J]. 地理学报(英文版), 2012, 22(3): 407-415. DOI: 10.1007/s11442-012-0935-0
作者姓名:王新生  樊江文  徐静  柳菲  高守杰  魏新彩
作者单位:School of Resources and Environmental Science, Hubei University;Wuhan Branch, Remote Sensing Application Center, Ministry of Agriculture;Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research,CAS
基金项目:China Global Change Research Program, No.2010CB950902;National Natural Science Foundation of China,No.41071240
摘    要:Land surface emissivity is one of the important parameters in temperature inversion from thermal infrared remote sensing. Using MOD11C3 of Terra-MODIS L3 level products, spatio-temporal data sets of land surface emissivity in China for 10 years from 2001 to 2010 are obtained. The results show that the land surface emissivity in the northwest desert region is the lowest in China, with little seasonal variations. In contrast, there are significant seasonal variations in land surface emissivity in northeast China and northern Xinjiang, the Qing-hai-Tibet Plateau, the Yangtze River Valley and the eastern and southern China. In winter, the land surface emissivity in the northeast China and northern Xinjiang is relatively high. The land surface emissivity of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau region is maintained at low value from November to March, while it becomes higher in other months. The land surface emissivity of the Yangtze River Valley, eastern and southern China, and Sichuan Basin varies from July to October, and peaks in August. Land surface emissivity values could be divided into five levels: low emissivity (0.6163-0.9638), moderate-low emissivity (0.9639-0.9709), moderate emis-sivity (0.9710-0.9724), moderate-high emissivity (0.9725-0.9738), and high emissivity (0.9739-0.9999). The percentages of areas with low emissivity, moderate-low emissivity and moderate emissivity are, respectively, about 20%, 10% and 20%. The moderate-high emis-sivity region makes up 40%-50% of China’s land surface area. The inter-annual variation of moderate-high emissivity region is also very clear, with two peaks (in spring and autumn) and two troughs (in summer and winter). The inter-annual variation of the high emissivity region is very significant, with a peak in winter (10%), while only 1% or 2% in other seasons. There is a clear association between the spatio-temporal distribution of China’s land surface emissivity and temperature: the higher the emissivity, the lower the temperature, and vice versa. Emis-sivity is an inherent property of any object, but the precise value of its emissivity depends very much on its surrounding environmental factors.

关 键 词:remote sensing  land surface emissivity  China

Land surface emissivity change in China from 2001 to 2010
Xinsheng Wang,Jiangwen Fan,Jing Xu,Fei Liu,Shoujie Gao,Xincai Wei. Land surface emissivity change in China from 2001 to 2010[J]. Journal of Geographical Sciences, 2012, 22(3): 407-415. DOI: 10.1007/s11442-012-0935-0
Authors:Xinsheng Wang  Jiangwen Fan  Jing Xu  Fei Liu  Shoujie Gao  Xincai Wei
Affiliation:1. School of Resources and Environmental Science, Hubei University, Wuhan 430062, China; 2. Wuhan Branch, Remote Sensing Application Center, Ministry of Agriculture, Wuhan 430062, China; 3. Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, CAS, Beijing 100101, China
Abstract:Land surface emissivity is one of the important parameters in temperature inversion from thermal infrared remote sensing. Using MOD11C3 of Terra-MODIS L3 level products, spatio-temporal data sets of land surface emissivity in China for 10 years from 2001 to 2010 are obtained. The results show that the land surface emissivity in the northwest desert region is the lowest in China, with little seasonal variations. In contrast, there are significant seasonal variations in land surface emissivity in northeast China and northern Xinjiang, the Qing-hai-Tibet Plateau, the Yangtze River Valley and the eastern and southern China. In winter, the land surface emissivity in the northeast China and northern Xinjiang is relatively high. The land surface emissivity of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau region is maintained at low value from November to March, while it becomes higher in other months. The land surface emissivity of the Yangtze River Valley, eastern and southern China, and Sichuan Basin varies from July to October, and peaks in August. Land surface emissivity values could be divided into five levels: low emissivity (0.6163–0.9638), moderate-low emissivity (0.9639–0.9709), moderate emis-sivity (0.9710–0.9724), moderate-high emissivity (0.9725–0.9738), and high emissivity (0.9739–0.9999). The percentages of areas with low emissivity, moderate-low emissivity and moderate emissivity are, respectively, about 20%, 10% and 20%. The moderate-high emis-sivity region makes up 40%–50% of China’s land surface area. The inter-annual variation of moderate-high emissivity region is also very clear, with two peaks (in spring and autumn) and two troughs (in summer and winter). The inter-annual variation of the high emissivity region is very significant, with a peak in winter (10%), while only 1% or 2% in other seasons. There is a clear association between the spatio-temporal distribution of China’s land surface emissivity and temperature: the higher the emissivity, the lower the temperature, and vice versa. Emis-sivity is an inherent property of any object, but the precise value of its emissivity depends very much on its surrounding environmental factors.
Keywords:remote sensing  land surface emissivity  China
本文献已被 CNKI 维普 SpringerLink 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号